Physical. Melting is always a physical change.
It's a physical change.
If you burn something it is a chemical change, however if you melt of boil it, it is a physical change.
no that is a physical property change, not a chemical property.
It's physical
no it is not it is a physical change because you add heat energy to melt it
it is a chemical change and i think maybe it is because you use heat to melt it and metal to shape it.
physical Water cannot melt because it is a liquid. However, a snowflake or an icicle can melt because they are solid states of water. You must understand that water can be in any one of three PHYSICAL states, liquid, solid or vapor ( a gas ). Changing physical states is not a chemical change, but a direct result of heat or cold application.
Melting is a physical change because it does not involve a change in the chemical composition of the substance. When a substance melts, its molecules or atoms move apart, resulting in a change in its physical state from solid to liquid.
This is a physical change. Chemical changes are changes in "what things are made out of".
No. The iron would melt, which is a physical change.
A physical change is one where no new substance is produced. Melting is an example of a physical change. When you melt iron, you get liquid iron, it's still the same chemical substance. If you melt copper, you get liquid copper, not liquid iron.
No not ia any way