A change in temperature can change the rate of physical or chemical change.
Temperature change is a physical phrenomenon.
Change in temperature is not a chemical change rather it is a physical change because it does not cause any change in composition or chemical properties of matter.
A temperature change can be seen both in physical and chemical changes.
It is called a physical change.
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...)
The observation that hydrogen chloride is a gas at room temperature is a PHYSICAL property.
Melting is a physical change; but above a temperature the thermal decomposition of butter begin - this is a chemical change.
It is called a physical change.
No, temperature is not a chemical change. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles in a substance and does not involve the rearrangement of atoms or formation of new substances.
Physical change, changes the appearance or the surface. Chemical change, changes the minerals inside the object. Physical deals with the appearance and the surface. Chemical changes the structure of the minerals inside the object.
A decrease in temperature is a physical change, not chemical.
It's a physical change, because bending a wire doesn't affect the chemical makeup of it.