No
It is the principle of conservation of energy.
Because of the principle of energy conservation the lost mass must reappear as generated energy, according to Einstein's equation E = mc²
A citation from Wikipedia:"The law of conservation of mass, also known as principle of mass/matter conservation is that the mass of a closed system (in the sense of a completely isolated system) will remain constant over time."For more details see the link bellow.
Chemical processes do not create or destroy mass, a principle known as conservation of mass.
law of conservation of mass
linear momentum. A rocket works by expelling gases from one end at a very high velocity. The escaping gases have a very high speed and this with their mass translates to a very large momentum. Due to the principle of conservation of momentum the body of the rocket is pushed forward. If both the momentum of the gases as well as that of the rocket are added the sum is zero.
The principle of conservation of mass states that in a chemical reaction, the total mass of the reactants must equal the total mass of the products.
Mass can never be created nor be destroyed
No. That would violate the Newtonian principle of Conservation of Mass.
The total mass during a chemical process in a closed system remain constant.
matter is not created or destroyed
matter is not created or destroyed
It is the principle of conservation of energy.
Because of the principle of energy conservation the lost mass must reappear as generated energy, according to Einstein's equation E = mc²
The law of conservation of mass
The amount of matter involved in a chemical reaction does not change. The total mass of the reactant must equal the total mass of the products.
Conservation of mass.