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Yes. Burning anything is a chemical change.
The magnesium burns readily in air to produce a white ash which is magnesium oxide. This is due to the "oxidation" of the metal.
The combustion of magnesium in air is a chemical reaction.
between your 2 choices its physical, when air is heated molecules move more quickly
When a magnesium strip is heated strongly in air, it undergoes a chemical reaction called oxidation. Magnesium reacts with oxygen in the air to form magnesium oxide. The mass of the strip increases because magnesium combines with oxygen atoms from the air to form a heavier compound (magnesium oxide).
Yes. Magnesium burns in air brightly giving Magnesium oxide, witch is a chemical change.
magnesium burns in oxygen to form magnesium oxide. and hence this is a chemical change
when magnesium burns in air a white powder called magnesium oxide is formed which is a new substance this is the chemical change
Yes. Burning anything is a chemical change.
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.
This is a chemical change. The reaction is: Mg + O ---> MgO
Physical.
It's a chemical change. The magnesium reacts and combines with the oxygen in the air.
The magnesium burns readily in air to produce a white ash which is magnesium oxide. This is due to the "oxidation" of the metal.
1.burning of wood 2.burning of magnesium in air 3.making curd from milk 4.heating sugar how come is these are 4 example
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