Yes, temperature have generally an important effect.
Yes, because the temperature can change the state of the elements being chemical;y tested so yes it does have and effect
Yes. How much it affects the experiment depends on exactly what the experiment is and how much the temperature has changed, but any change in temperature affects water's physical and chemical properties.
no its a chemical change (i just did i project on making ice cream in meh class and one question was "is this a chemical or physical change? how do u know?"
No, the process of ice melting at 0 degrees Celsius is a physical change, not a chemical property. It involves a phase change from a solid to a liquid state without any change in the chemical composition of the ice.
physical For A+ Students
Pounding a gold coin into a different shape would probably not effect a chemical change. If, however, the pounding produced enough heat to meal the coin, some chemical change could take place.
i think physical and chemical because for physical u r mixing it with the water. And for chemical I think it is because mixing drink mix with water is goes the effect the outcome chemical produced with both so it can also become a chemical change.....................
Boiling water in a kettle is a physical change. This is because the change is reversible, and it involves a phase transition from liquid to gas without changing the chemical makeup of water molecules.
by exessive use of juices and cold drinks.
Toasting bread is a chemical change because the heat causes chemical reactions to occur within the bread, leading to a browning effect and changing the chemical composition of the bread.
Yes, boiling point is a chemical property. It is the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a gas phase under standard atmospheric pressure, and is characteristic of that substance, making it a chemical property.
During a physical change, the substance's form or state may alter, but its chemical composition remains the same. This means no new substances are formed, and the change is usually reversible by physical means such as heating, cooling, or mixing with other substances. Examples include melting, freezing, boiling, or dissolving.