Bagels are a food industry product, not a reaction; but the production of bagels involves chemical reactions.
Burning is a chemical reaction, an oxidation.
Bagel is a mixture not a compound.
A burned bagel is a chemical change because the heat causes the sugars, proteins, and fats in the bagel to react with oxygen in the air, resulting in the formation of new substances with different properties. This irreversible change alters the composition of the bagel.
Yes, it is a chemical change.
Burning a bagel is a chemical change. This process involves the transformation of the bagel's components due to heat, resulting in the production of new substances, such as carbon and other compounds, along with changes in color and texture. Unlike a physical change, which only alters the form or appearance of a substance without changing its chemical composition, burning fundamentally alters the bagel's molecular structure.
Burning is most likely chemical
Chemical reaction
Combustion is a chemical reaction.
No. A chemical reaction is not alive.
A new chemical substance is formed during a chemical reaction by rearranging the atoms of the reactants. The products of a chemical reaction have different properties compared to the original reactants.
A chemical reaction is a graphical representation of a chemical reaction.
A chemical reaction is represented by a chemical equation.