try re-phrasing the question. here is a list of what is considered physical properties of objects. So the fact that paper can be cut might not be a physical property. but the fact that paper is not very strong is.
absorption area
boiling point
capacitance
color
concentration
conductance
density
dielectric
ductility
distribution
efficacy
electric charge
electric field
electric potential
emission
flow rate
fluidity
frequency
impedance
inductance
intensity
irradiance
length
location
luminance
luster
magnetic field
magnetic flux
mass
melting point
moment
momentum
permeability
permittivity
pressure
radiance
solubility
specific heat
resistance
spin
strength
temperature
tension
thermal transfer
velocity
viscosity
volume
Ripping paper is a physical change, not a physical property. The ability of paper to be ripped is a physical property.
riping paper, drawing on paper , washing clothessss there all reversible so they are physical changes not chemical
I think you mean "Is burning a paper a physical change?" Burning a paper is not a physical change. It is a chemical change. Because you can't turn the ashes of the paper into a normal paper again. Examples of physical change: Cutting a paper, sharpening a pencil, writing on a paper... Examples of chemical change: Rotten egg, Rusted steel, molded bread...
A physical property.
Conducting Electricity is a physical property, because being a conductor is a physical property
Physical, Because The Color Changes.. Not The Chemical Property Of The Paper.. :)
physical
riping paper, drawing on paper , washing clothessss there all reversible so they are physical changes not chemical
paper
physical
Yes, because if it doesn't change whatever the substance is, it's a physical property. For example, if you have a piece of paper, you can fold it in half. When you do that, it proves the piece of paper to be flexible without turning the paper into something else.
Chemical, because you cant undo it
Yes, because if it doesn't change whatever the substance is, it's a physical property. For example, if you have a piece of paper, you can fold it in half. When you do that, it proves the piece of paper to be flexible without turning the paper into something else.
Yes because you are not changing the property of it
The most important chemical property of paper is the acidity.
That is a chemical property. A physical property could be its mass, volume, density, physical state, or that it can tear easily. A physical property is one that does not change the chemical composition of the substance.
I think you mean "Is burning a paper a physical change?" Burning a paper is not a physical change. It is a chemical change. Because you can't turn the ashes of the paper into a normal paper again. Examples of physical change: Cutting a paper, sharpening a pencil, writing on a paper... Examples of chemical change: Rotten egg, Rusted steel, molded bread...
physical property