The physical properties are of course different. The chemical properties are considered identical but this is not a general rule; for example hydrogen isotopes (1H and 2H) have some different chemical and biochemical properties.
The differences in chemical properties are not significant (excepting protium and deuterium); the physical properties are different.
sand has the same properties of salt
True. Compounds do not have the same properties as the elements that form them.
No other gas has exactly the same properties as carbon dioxide.
No, the light remains the same light; but it is spread out in a different wavefront.
The properties of Brent Crude oil are the same properties of any crude oil, density, viscosity, and solubility. Although Brent is LCO (light crude oil).
wheat are the common properties and characteristic of light
Sir W. Crookes discovered the Properties of Light in 1879.
one of the properties of light is that light travel at straight line
Heinrich Hertz. Hertz established that electromagnetic waves had the properties of light and confirmed Maxwell's Theory that Light and Electromagnetism are the same.
the properties of a compound are not the same as the elements that form them.
Not exactly - light has wave properties. That means that it behaves like a wave.
The physical properties are of course different. The chemical properties are considered identical but this is not a general rule; for example hydrogen isotopes (1H and 2H) have some different chemical and biochemical properties.
This is part of the Electromagnetic radiation spectrum, visible light occupies a small part of this spectrum, but all wavelengths have the same physical properties
The differences in chemical properties are not significant (excepting protium and deuterium); the physical properties are different.
The simplest answer is that light consists of particles with wave properties. Elementary particles also have wave properties. This is how light travels.