no
Heating a frying pan is a physical change. A chemical change is when you change the chemical properties. Heating the pan is only changing the temperature of the pan not the chemical make up.
CHEMICAL:)
It is not a chemical change, unless you heat it sufficiently to make it catch fire.
This is a chemical reaction; oxygen is released.
Heating is a physical change.
Yes, heating red lead in a test tube is a chemical change. The process of heating causes the red lead to undergo a chemical reaction, leading to a change in its chemical composition. This change is irreversible.
Heating KClO3 and MnO2 to form KCl and MnO2 is a chemical change as new substances are being produced.
Heating anything to a visible change is ALWAYS a chemical change
Heating is a physical process.
Heating potassium bicarbonate is a chemical change because it causes a decomposition reaction. This results in the formation of new substances (potassium carbonate, water, and carbon dioxide) that have different chemical properties than the original compound.
It is not.
Heating a substance can result in either a physical change or a chemical change. A physical change does not alter the substance's composition, such as melting or boiling, while a chemical change leads to the formation of new substances with different properties, such as burning or baking.