yes
Warming chocolate is a physical change because it changes the physical state of the chocolate from solid to liquid without forming any new substances.
It affects it state.
My chocolate bunghole, g doub out
Chemical changes change to a substance`s chemical formula but a Physical change only affects attributes like color shape or size
Baking chocolate cupcakes involves both chemical and physical changes. Physical changes occur when ingredients are mixed, the batter changes texture when heated, and the cupcakes rise in the oven. Chemical changes take place when the cupcakes bake, as the ingredients react to produce new compounds and the cupcakes change color and flavor.
Chemical changes cannot be changed back to how they originally whereas physical changes is only the appearance has changed and can be changed back to their original state e.g chocolate (cam be melted and then hardened)
Yes. It's just like ice to water and back to ice. - - - - - "Reaction" implies a chemical change. Melting chocolate is a physical change. (Hardening melted chocolate can involve a whole series of physical changes but that's a different issue.)
three physical changes of making a s'more would be breaking the chocolate, breaking the crackers, and chewing the s'more when it's in your mouth.
a physical change is when no new substance has been created (chocolate milk) and has no new chemical properties of its own. Chemical is the exact opposite
Nope the fact that it is mixed with Chocolate Chips in the batter makes it a heterogeneous.
no because itjust changes color and taste wich is a physical property
A physical change affects the appearance or state of a substance without changing its chemical composition. This can include changes in shape, size, texture, or state of matter (solid, liquid, gas). Examples of physical changes include melting ice, tearing paper, and breaking a stick.