physical change
No breaking a plate is a physical change. A chemical change is a change to a substance where its identity changes. When you break a plate you still have a plate not a new substance.
Actually breaking a dinner plate is not a chemical change. A chemical change is like putting sugar into a hot cup of water or tea.
A plate dropping and shattering is a physical change. It is not a chemical change, as the material used in making the plate doesn't change.
This is a physical process.
The answer is physical because in physical they are 5 senses see, hear, touch,smell. The toasted marsh mallow you can taste it, smell it when you are far, touch it when you eat it, you can hear it when it comes out of the oven,and you can see it when it's on your plate.
No Chemical changes are not reversible. If you fry an egg, you will see the white change from a liquid to a solid. How ever, when you remove the egg from pan, the white does not change back to liquid on your plate. The substances present have reacted chemically preventing a physical change from occurring.
When you drop the plate, all the pieces are still made of the same material as the plate when it was whole. The drop just changed the way it looked and nothing else.
A change plate on a register is a physical compartment where the cashiers store coins and bills to provide change to customers during transactions. It helps the cashier to quickly access the necessary denominations and maintain an organized cash management system.
A plate reader (microplate reader) are designed to read and look for chemical, physical or biological substances in microtiter plates. They are used to discover drugs, measure and manufacture in the pharmaceutical industry.
they are different because a chemical change is a change in which you apply heat to a object to change it in form physical change is when you change a form it size or shape but do not apply heat.So you will know the differnce because when you add heat to any object its a chemical change but expccpt boiling water
The process of breaking down landforms is called weathering, which can be physical or chemical, and erosion, which involves the movement of weathered material by water, wind, ice, or gravity. New landforms are created through processes such as deposition, volcanic activity, and tectonic plate movements. Over time, these processes shape and reshape the Earth's surface in a constant cycle of destruction and creation.
It is called folding when rocks bend without breaking because of plate movement.