Some examples of physical change include melting an ice cube, chopping wood, and breaking a piece of glass. Additional examples include tearing a piece of paper, combining water and sand, and boiling water.
no it is a physical change the tree did not change into a different thing it simply changed in size
Burning wood is a chemical change because the chemical makeup changes through the addition of heat. wood + heat = ash and other gases Pretty much when one substance changes into another substance and the change is irreversible, it is a chemical change.
A physical change is any change that doesn't affect substance's chemical makeup or chemical properties.Physical changes include (but aren't limited to): a substance being crushed, cut, torn apart, or powdered.For example, cutting a big log into smaller pieces is a PHYSICAL change (because the wood has the same properties before and after being cut), whereas burning the wood would require changing the chemical makeup of the wood (thus being a CHEMICAL change).
Physical change...just think of it as if you were getting your hair "chopped" off. You only temporarily change your appearance and eventually it grows back and so will the tree.
Yes, it's the equivalent of chopping wood in half, which is also a physical change. Unlike chopping wood in half, this change is completely reversible.
Yes just a physical change
No, chopping wood does not change the atoms in it.
yes becuase it still is Wood
Burning wood is a chemical change.
Yes, chopping is a physical change: the chemical composition of the molecules inside the wood remains the same. Burning causes the molecules in the wood to react with the air (mostly with the oxygen in the air), and the result is different compounds than before.
Chopping anything is a physical change.
chopping or chomping wood
gathering, chopping, & purchasing.
Chopping down trees.
You can get dark wood by chopping 1 of the tree
chopping wood :)