It's a physical change. You can, theoretically, turn a car fender back into a flat sheet of steel. You wouldn't want to, and the machine you'd need to do it would be immense, but you could.
It's not the rusty bike it's the rusting of the bike. rust forms in a process called oxidation, or when iron comes in contact with oxygen. Also one reason you can tell it's a chemical change is when you can't reverse the process. Or when it involves changing the chemical compound.
Your car.
Yes. Usually when a substance freezes, or becomes a solid, it will decrease in volume, causing an increase in density. Water is an exception, which is less dense when it freezes/becomes solid.
The main agents of chemical weathering are acid precipatation, lichens, and other plants like mold decaying the rock. :)
The smaller vehicle will encounter the larger velocity change.
It's a chemical reaction
it is ge in the substance that you have. say if you have a car and it has rust that is a chemical change
yes it is a chemical change
It is a chemical change.
chemical change
The burning of fuel in a car is a chemical change because it involves a chemical reaction between the fuel and oxygen resulting in the production of new substances like carbon dioxide and water vapor.
No, though it is not easily irreversible like chemical reactions it is mainly a physical change, unless your car set in fire. (Burning is chemical)
no
A car Rusting is a chemicall change as a the iron in the car is converted into a different substance: iron oxide.
Yes. The charging causes a chemical change in the electrolyte of the battery.
Spray painting a car involves a chemical change because the paint chemicals react to form a new substance that bonds to the surface of the car's body. This is different from a physical change, where the paint would simply be a new layer on top of the car without a chemical reaction occurring.
No. Nothing changes in its chemical nature.