neither physical or changes its property
neither physical or changes its property
Mass is neither a physical nor chemical change; however, it is a physical property of matter.
Neither a chemical nor a physical change results in a change in mass. According to the law of conservation of matter/mass, matter can neither be created nor destroyed. This law holds true for physical and chemical changes.
In a physical change, the mass remains the same since it involves a rearrangement of particles without changing their identities. However, in a chemical change, the mass can change due to the formation or breaking of chemical bonds, resulting in a gain or loss of mass.
A physical property is part of the make up of something that has a physical mass. No decomposing is not a physical property but rather both a physical change and a chemical change hence changing the chemical properties . The physical change is when the mass changes due to the brake down of the chemical and physical properties.
The total amount of matter in a substance remains the same after both chemical and physical changes. This is known as the Law of Conservation of Mass, which states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction or physical change, only rearranged. So, the total mass of the substances before and after the change will be equal.
mass
Physical changes are like cutting paper. The mass does not change. Chemical changes do not change total mass either. If you put a candle in a sealed container so that you may measure the total mass of the candle and the air before burning, then light the candle electrically but keep everything sealed, the total mass after burning will still be the same. But if you measure only the candle, then its mass has changed. So the mass of one single 'ingredient' will change during a chemical change.
mass mass
Yes, both for physical AND chemical changes!
Is tearing paper a physical change or a chemical change
A physical change to an object is a change in properties not involving the chemical makeup. In other words, a physical change is any change you can make to an object without changing the actual substance. (I.e. state of matter, size, shape, color . . .etc.) A chemical change is a change that forms a new substance through a chemical reaction. A chemical reaction is often signaled by bubbling or fizzing, but the only real way to prove a chemical reaction is by coming up with a new substance. So physical changes leave you with the same substance (slightly altered in appearance/texture etc.), but chemical reactions give you a new substance.