Yes it is. :)
Yes. This is because when the cake is baked, chemicals help it rise, making this a chemical change. Making the icing is a different story. It is a physical change.
Cake Batter Is Changed Into A Physical Change
Cake is a substance. It's not a "change" of any kind.
Yes, cutting a cake is an example of a physical change because the cake is being physically altered without changing its chemical composition.
Baking a cake is a chemical property because it is going from dough to cake or batter to cake.
Physical changes are ones which do not affect the chemical composition of a substance. For instance, if you cut a cake in half, that is a physical change. Nothing has changed except the shape, weight, and size of the cake. When you bake the cake batter, however, you are causing a chemical change. The batter changes into a cake; when you cut the cake, it doesn't change into anything.
physical change
Chemical change.
a chemical change
Baking a cake is a chemical change because the ingredients undergo a chemical reaction when exposed to heat, resulting in a transformation of their molecular structure to form the cake. This is different from a physical change, which does not alter the composition of the ingredients.
Baking is a chemical change.
Baking is a chemical change