Chemical properties are properties that describe chemical traits; for example, reactivity, acidity, and toxicity are all chemical traits; you may say they aren't obvious. A physical property describes a physical trait that has to do with state of being, and are for the mostpart obvious: state of matter, color, odor, shape, melting/freezing point, density, etc.
Physical properties are things like size and shape. Chemical properties are things like does it combust or does it react with anything.
Copper has both chemical and physical properties. Chemical properties refer to how copper reacts with other substances, while physical properties refer to characteristics like its color, density, and conductivity.
Physical properties like lustre cannot be determined. Chemical properties like enthalpy values is hard to determine.
A physical change changes the physical properties of an element like color where chemical changes change the chemical properties of an element and usually can't be undone.
No. Chemical and physical properties are different.
Cadmium is an element. Like all elements it has both physical and chemical properties.
Physical and chemical properties change as the result of a chemical change, which produces new products with different physical and chemical properties than the reactants.
A chemical change is when the chemical properties of a substance changes and a physical change is when the chemical properties stay the same but the physical properties (shape, temperature etc...)
Zinc is not a property; it is a substance. Like all substances it has its own set of physical and chemical properties.
Chemical properties describe how a substance can form new substances by undergoing chemical reactions, like flammability or reactivity. Physical properties describe characteristics that can be observed without changing the substance's identity, like color, density, or melting point.
Chemical property
Physical properties are it's rest quantitative properties, while the chemical properties are its reactions to things like temperature and other substances. I hope somebody gives you a more comprehensive answer. :)