Yes, most carbon containing compounds or pure carbon burn 'chemically' to produce carbond dioxide.
Cooking is a chemical process.
Burning a candle is a chemical change that happens relatively quickly. The heat from the flame melts the wax, which is then vaporized and reacts with oxygen in the air to produce light, heat, carbon dioxide, and water vapor. This process is a combustion reaction, which is a type of chemical change.
a chemical reaction makes something happen, like rust or water
the chemical shall be changed
In the cytoplasm, because that is where the chemical reactions happen.
No
No, but production of new molecules does happen.
Cooking an egg or burning logs on a fire.
Equillibrium
yes
well I'm not really sure but i think it needs time to mix in with each other and then it will cause a chemical reaction.
The chemical properties cannot be changed; only after a chemical reaction the products have new chemical properties.