This DICK
Yes, the tendency of a material to catch fire is a chemical property. It relates to the material's flammability, which describes how easily it can ignite and burn in the presence of an ignition source. This property depends on the chemical composition of the material and how it reacts with oxygen during combustion. Therefore, it is classified as a chemical property rather than a physical one.
its chemical because if a wood catches on fire it turns to ashes and thats chemicl cause you cant make it change back to a log
The sense of taste and smell is proper of animals and human beings. Chemical substances and other physical elements also release odours that we detect through our nose and certain receptors in our brain. In fact, smell is a physical property, however I think that some chemical process occur in the brain in order to catch the smell.
Flammability is considered to be a chemical and not a physical change. This based on the fact that combustion will take place which is a chemical reaction.
The sense of taste and smell is proper of animals and human beings. Chemical substances and other physical elements also release odours that we detect through our nose and certain receptors in our brain. In fact, smell is a physical property, however I think that some chemical process occur in the brain in order to catch the smell.
this answer has chemical propertiesnot property....To observe the chemical properties of a substance you must try to change it to another substance.another one is : A chemical property of methane ( natural gas) is that it can catch fire and burn in air.
A chemical property is any of a material's properties that becomes evident during a chemical reaction; that is, any quality that can be established only by changing a substance's chemical identity. Simply speaking, chemical properties cannot be determined just by viewing or touching the substance; the substance's internal structure must be affected for its chemical properties to be investigated. (Wikipedia)A physical property is any aspect of an object or substance that can be measured or perceived without changing its identity. (Wikipedia)A substance's ability to dissolve in acetone would be classified as a chemical property, since, technically, dissolution is a chemical reaction for which the following generic equation holds:AB -> A+ + B-where A denotes the cation and B denotes the anion. Furthermore, dissolution does change the internal structure of the substance, changing it from a neutral compound to a solution of ions.
idk! no one has it anywhere! at this one site, they said that density was a chemical property! what are they talking about? it's physical! gee people! doesn't anyone know what the flammability of iodine is?
Physical Property: The appearance of the object changes, but the chemical remains the same. Such as the color, size, mass, smell, etc.Chemical Property: The chemicals inside change. The substance is the same as it was before, but doesnt looks the same. For example, a ice cube that melts to a liquid. The appearance did change; however, its still has the same substance as before, which was water.
A physical property can be observed without changing the chemical composition of the substance. A chemical property can only be observed during a chemical change in which the chemical composition of the substance changes.
Yes it is physical.
Yes, if you are throwing a ball on his property that is obstruction and if you are playing catch on his property that is trespassing.