No, a physical change does not involve breaking or forming chemical bonds. It only involves changes in physical properties like size, shape, or state of matter. Chemical changes involve the breaking and forming of chemical bonds to create new substances.
Yes, it is possible.
false - it's a physical change. The sugar remains sugar only in solution.
No, in a physical change, no new substances are formed. The change only affects the physical appearance or state of the matter, such as size, shape, or phase, but the chemical composition remains the same.
When ice cream melts, it undergoes a physical change. The change is reversible, as the process involves a phase change from solid to liquid without any change in the chemical composition of the ice cream.
True.
No, a physical change does not involve breaking or forming chemical bonds. It only involves changes in physical properties like size, shape, or state of matter. Chemical changes involve the breaking and forming of chemical bonds to create new substances.
False. Changing the size and shape of pieces of wood is a physical change, not a chemical change. A chemical change involves the alteration of the chemical composition of a substance, while a physical change only affects the physical properties of a substance.
False. In a physical change, matter can change its shape without changing its chemical composition. Examples include melting, freezing, and dissolving.
Yes, it is possible.
True. A change in state, such as from solid to liquid or gas, is a physical change because the substance's chemical composition remains the same and only its physical properties, like shape or state, change.
yes it is true that bones can sbsorb more force without breaking concrete can
I'd say no. Melting just changes the physical properties. Example: A rubber ball. If you melt a rubber ball it will still be rubber, just in a different form.
False. In a physical change, the makeup of matter remains the same, only the physical properties like shape, size, or state are altered. No new substances are formed during a physical change.
false - it's a physical change. The sugar remains sugar only in solution.
No, physical objects generally follow physical laws and do not break them. If an object appears to be breaking a physical law, it is more likely due to a misunderstanding or misapplication of the law rather than the object itself violating it.
False. When water changes to steam, it undergoes a physical change, not a chemical change. Heating water to its boiling point causes it to change from a liquid to a gas, but the chemical composition of water (H2O) remains the same.