Plant growing involve physical and chemical changes.
A growing plant involves both chemical and physical changes.
A tree growing is a chemical change because the chemical reaction that happens in the trees cells causes the carbon dioxide and water to become sugar (food) for the plant to grow and oxygen it can "exhale" much like we exhale carbon dioxide.
No It is chemical. Because the seeds react with the chemicals in the soil and the water. See the related link below.
First of all lets understand Physical & Chemical Change. Physical change can be reversed and the chemical properties of the two states remain the same. Chemical change cannot be reversed and the chemical properties of the two state are entirely different. Now lets get back to the question. Is growing a tree a physical or a chemical change. The growing of a tree requires chemical changes, primarily the conversion of water and carbon dioxide into cellulose and oxygen. So the growth results primarily from chemical changes.
That is a physical change.
Picking tomatoes from a plant a physical change or chemical change
It is physical because if water is added back to the plant it can actually recover. Also, the end result (the wilted plant) is still a plant, not something completely different.
Added correction:It is chemical because you can not simply revert it (newly grown hair) back to its original compounds.Plants (newly grown) are product of many (bio)chemical synthesis reactions.It is much the same as growing animals or humans.
Evaporation is a change of state and therefore (like all C.o.S.) it is a physical change.
A chemical change. If the identity of of the chemicals involved change in identity, it is a chemical change.
no physical change is ptting ice cream and milk and mixing it for a milkshake or burning a piece of paper.
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