Yes it is because it is only changing state, nothing new is created
no
When salt water has evaporated, it has undergone a physical change since the salt and water both retain their chemical configuration, only have changed their form.
No--evaporated water is still water and you get water back from steam when it cools down
Physical, but the pond does not chemically change - you still have water and pond goo, only the water has evaporated.
Evaporating a filtrate to dryness is a physical change because it involves the phase transition of a liquid (filtrate) to a gas (water vapor) without changing the chemical composition of the substance.
It is chemical change... It is also physical change........Thats because the appearance also changed.Its a chemical change because when something is evaporated, these steps include chemicals.
Because when the salty water has evaporated, the salt and water have separated.
Evaporating seawater is a physical change. Physical changes affect the form, but not the chemical makeup of a substance. The sea water is undergoing a change in states of matter, not a chemical reaction. You can undo the change by condensing the evaporated water .
collect: gather such as water droplets colllected on the flask as the water evaporated. This represents a physical change rather than a chemical change.
It would be both. It's a physical change because it is changing state and a chemical change because water is being evaporated.
When orange drink crystals are stirred into a pitcher of water, it is a physical change. The crystals dissolve in the water, resulting in a mixture, but the chemical composition of the substances does not change. This process is reversible, as the water can be evaporated to recover the original components.
The change of state when water is evaporated is from liquid to gas. Evaporation is a phase transition from the liquid phase to the gas phase.