No. Mass must be conserved in a chemical changes according to the law of conservation of mass, which holds that the mass of the reactants and the mass of the products of a chemical reaction must be equal. However, there is no similar law about conserving volume and volume can change dramatically if a gas is produced.
Yes, in a closed system.
Mass is conserved. This means it remains constant.
The mass remain unchanged; this is the law of mass conservation.
A change in mass is not always an indicator of a chemical change because mass is conserved in chemical reactions. The total mass of the reactants is equal to the total mass of the products. However, there are some exceptions where a change in mass can occur due to the release or absorption of gases or changes in the physical state (such as evaporation or condensation) during a chemical reaction.
Of course !
In an ordinary chemical reaction, the mass of the products is equal to the mass of the reactants. Matter is conserved.
The answer is mass. The Law of Conservation of Mass states that when a chemical or physical change takes place, you end up with the same amount of mass that you started in. It may just be in a different state, such as a gas.
Mass is conserved. This means it remains constant.
neither physical or changes its property
As far as I know this is not true- volume can be increased or decreased. What is conserved in a chemical reaction is mass. Matter is not created or destroyed.
The mass remains conserved... while it is in case of a nuclear reaction where the total mass changes... in chemical reaction there is no change in mass...
Mass (Matter) and Energy is conserved during a Chemical equation
mass
During a chemical change,chemical energy may be changed to other forms of energy.other forms of energy may also be changed to a chemical energy.
The mass remain unchanged; this is the law of mass conservation.
No. If the volume of air changes, so will its mass.
A change in mass is not always an indicator of a chemical change because mass is conserved in chemical reactions. The total mass of the reactants is equal to the total mass of the products. However, there are some exceptions where a change in mass can occur due to the release or absorption of gases or changes in the physical state (such as evaporation or condensation) during a chemical reaction.
Its conserved during the combustion of anything - the mass of the products is always equal to the mass of the materials that react.