boiling a phyisical change... but not chemical ( making it a new substance )
plasma
Vaporization.
The word "change" can be used with the phrase "of state" to describe a transition or transformation from one condition or form to another. For example, "The boiling water underwent a change of state to become steam."
Evaporation is one of the 3 types of boiling.
A physical reaction, or change, is one that can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the substance. Boiling is a physical change because the substance that is boiling does not change its chemical composition. For example, water is still H2O whether it is boiling or not boiling.
For a substance to change from one state of matter to another, energy must be added or removed to break or form intermolecular forces. The temperature and pressure conditions must also be appropriate for the desired state change to occur, such as melting, boiling, or freezing.
this is a tough one but it might be chemical because the steam is a new form of matter
A physical change occurs.
A physical change is when a substance undergoes a process whereby its physical features change but its chemical features stay the same.A chemical change is when an object undergoes a process whereby its chemical composition changes.The water leaving as steam has undergone a physical change (evaporation) from a liquid state to a gaseous one, but no chemical change has occurred because it is still H2O. By definition, any change in the state of matter is a physical change.
Yes, "become" is a form of the verb "to be" when used to indicate a change or transformation from one state to another.
a physical one because the water only changes it state of matter or its form so its physical
By adding heat and removing heat.