Yes
Snow disappearing is a physical change. It is a combination of melting and then evaporating and of sublimation.
Melting of ice with salt is example of physical change as there is no chemical reaction involved .
yes it is. because you can freeze it and melt it
It is a Physical Change. Melting it does not change what components/elements are found in snow. It is just a phase change from solid to liquid.
physical, because there is no chemical reaction to cause the change. it's just heat.
Melting snow is a physical change because it involves a change in the state of water from a solid (ice/snow) to a liquid form, without altering the chemical composition of the water molecules. This change is reversible, as the melted snow can refreeze back into ice under appropriate conditions.
Melting
Snow can undergo physical changes such as compacting when pressure is applied, melting into water when exposed to higher temperatures, and sublimating directly from a solid to a gas without melting. It can also change in texture as it goes through freeze-thaw cycles, resulting in a granular or crusty surface.
it is a physical change
physical change according to physics nd chemical change according to chemistry
'Melting' is always a physical process.It is NEVER a chemical reaction or process because molecules (of the water in snow) do NOT change at all when melting. Only their (physical) state (of aggregation) is changed from solid(ice) to liquid (fluid water)
Melting is a physical change.