Chewing the food is not really a chemical reaction. However, your saliva does partially break down the food in your mouth, which would be a chemical reaction in a way. The main part of the chemical reaction happens when the food goes into your stomach to be digested. There, it is broken down almost completely by the acids. Then, as the food moves through your intestines, and other organs, the food gets completely broken down until it comes out the other end.
I'm not a scientist... so no, if you eat food it just digests into your body system
Yes! It is a chemical change. When you swallow food it goes down into your digestion system and don't you have liquids in your body? Your food digests.
During eating foods are chemically transformed in other products.
no There is no Chemical change going on.
Fire is a chemical reaction. A forest fire is a disaster consisting of chemical reactions.
This chemical reaction is known as combustion.
Fire is not a physical or chemical property. Fire is not a property. Fire is a chemical reaction where oxygen combines with some or all of the chemical components of the fuel, emitting light and heat.
Firing a forest is a chemical change because you change a wood into ashes and never reverse it back again
No, rusting is chemical reaction - an oxidation.
Fire is a chemical reaction (oxydation).
Fire is a chemical reaction. A forest fire is a disaster consisting of chemical reactions.
Fire is the result of an oxidation reaction.
A chemical reaction is irreversible, while a physical change is reversible. Fire is a chemical reaction because you can't get back the products.
because its a chemical reaction
This chemical reaction is known as combustion.
no it is a chemical reaction!
Fire is a violent reaction of oxydation.
No, fire is not "alive". It is a chemical reaction.
yes it is its a combustion
Radiant energy is exothermic energy. Fire is a chemical reaction that produces heat. This heat is released as a result of the exothermic chemical reaction.
Fire is not an animal. Fire is a chemical reaction involving rapid oxidation and combustion of an object. Fire is only a visual manifestation of the heat and by-products of this reaction.