This is a chemical change. The reaction is: Mg + O ---> MgO
yes because the magnesium reacts with that oxygen in the air to form magnesium oxide
Burning is a chemical change.
This is a chemical change, like any other burning reaction: magnesium is turned into magnesium oxide by burning reaction with oxygen (from air). 2Mg + O2 --> 2MgO
It shows the change of when the magnesium is burning in the presence of oxygen.
Burning of anything is a chemical change. Combustion (burning) is a chemical reaction; it is simply where oxygen is added to, for example, an element, and turns it into an oxide. Burning phosphorus would result in phosphorus oxide. P + O2 --> P4010
The reaction between magnesium nitrate and potassium chromate is a chemical change. 2KOH(aq) + Mg(NO3)2(aq) --> 2KNO2(aq) + Mg(OH)2(s)
It is a physical change.
No. Burning magnesium, or burning anything for that matter, is a chemical change. The magnesium reacts with oxygen to form magnesium oxide, and to some degree reacts with nitrogen to form magnesium nitride.
Is it a chemical change.
If you burn anything, no matter what it is, you are activating a chemical change.
This is a chemical change, like any other burning reaction: magnesium is turned into magnesium oxide by burning reaction with oxygen (from air). 2Mg + O2 --> 2MgO
This is a chemical change, like any other burning reaction: magnesium is turned into magnesium oxide by burning reaction with oxygen (from air). 2Mg + O2 --> 2MgO
Burning magnesium (or burning anything) can be described as a chemical reaction, or as a chemical change. It is not a property. However, the capacity of being able to burn, also known as flammability, is a chemical property.
Burning is a chemical change.
Yes, burning is a chemical change.
Yes. Burning anything is a chemical change.
magnesium burns in oxygen to form magnesium oxide. and hence this is a chemical change
Burning is a chemical change.
Burning is a chemical change.