No. An example of a physical change is cutting up a carrot. Physical changes occur when the shape of the substance or the state (gas, liquid, solid) of it change. In the example, the carrot's shape is changed (1 piece to many pieces), so it's a physical change. The composition never changes.
When the "state" of matter changes its physical properties also changes.
Solids have definite volume and shape.
Liquids have definite volume but do not have definite shape.
Gas do not have definite volume or definite shape.
However, the chemical properties of a substance are not altered by a physical change, except that reactions may proceed at a different rate (for example, crushed coal or atomized gasoline).
No. A physical change is a change in somethings size, color, texture, mass, volume...etc. A substance going through a physical change remains the same substance at the end. A chemical change changes composition.
I cannot recall if there is an exception, but elemental matter can generally take one of three physical states without undergoing a chemical change. An element can be a gas, liquid or solid depending upon its temperature and as long as it is not in the presence of other reactive elements or molecules. I am unclear on how this might play with all molecular structures, but a great many obey the same idea. For instance, CO2 becomes the solid we know as 'dry ice' when cold enough without a chemical change.
Hydrogen in any state would be very unstable in the presence of oxygen, especially when heated. Both elements are highly reactive; they like to combine with things. In purest form, there would be no concern with hydrogen until it became hot enough to 'fuse' into helium. This is the very process going on in the sun and it takes a great deal of heat to cause it to happen!!
Chemical change. In the process of a chemical change, the composition (particle), is changed into a new substance, with different particles. Example of a chemical change is Burning wood because the wood after burnt is turned into Ashes. A new substance.
No, it is false. In a physical change, in a chemical change the make up changes. Think of a physical change as cutting a cake: even after you cut it, it is still a cake!
A chemical change involve a change of composition.
no
During a physical change, the chemical makeup of matter remains the same. The atoms and molecules that make up the substance do not change their identities, only their arrangement or state. This means that no new substances are formed during a physical change.
It is a physical change.
Sublimation of mothballs is a physical change. Sublimation is the process of a substance transitioning from a solid directly to a gas without going through a liquid phase. It does not involve a change in the chemical makeup of the substance.
Souring milk causes a chemical change because it changes its state of matter (from a liquid to a semi-solid), and it grows bacteria. When milk sours it causes a permanent change, therefore making it a chemical change.
A physical change is a change in the form of matter but not the chemical composition of it.
yes
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physical
a physical change is when the shape/ state of matter is changed and no new matter is produced
physical For A+ Students
physical
yes it does
The physical or chemical form of matter can be changed.
During a physical change, the chemical makeup of matter remains the same. The atoms and molecules that make up the substance do not change their identities, only their arrangement or state. This means that no new substances are formed during a physical change.
If by matter you mean molecules / atoms then no. Physical change is when the look / shape of something is changed but not its chemical structure, chemical change is when the molecules that make up the object n question are changed.
This change in the state of matter (liquid to solid) is called freezing; it is a physical change, the chemical nature of the molecules is not changed.
It is a physical change.