It depends on how long you roast it! If you simply allow it to warm up, it is still a marshmallow after roasting, so it is a physical change.
If you like it crispy and burnt, it is a chemical change because it starts off white and then it eventually melts and turns brown. This browning is oxidation, a chemical process where some of the marshmallow's sugar is burnt and carbon dioxide is released into the air.
Roasting a marshmallow is a physical change, not a chemical change. The marshmallow undergoes a change in its physical state as it is heated, but its chemical composition remains the same.
It depends on how long you roast it! If you simply allow it to warm up, it is still a marshmallow after roasting, so it is a physical change. If you like it crispy and burnt, it is a chemical change because it starts off white and then it eventually melts and turns brown. This browning is oxidation, a chemical process where some of the marshmallow's sugar is burnt and carbon dioxide is released into the air.
It depends on how long you roast it! If you simply allow it to warm up, it is still a marshmallow after roasting, so it is a physical change. If you like it crispy and burnt, it is a chemical change because it starts off white and then it eventually melts and turns brown. This browning is oxidation, a chemical process where some of the marshmallow's sugar is burnt and carbon dioxide is released into the air.
It depends on how long you roast it! If you simply allow it to warm up, it is still a marshmallow after roasting, so it is a physical change. If you like it crispy and burnt, it is a chemical change because it starts off white and then it eventually melts and turns brown. This browning is oxidation, a chemical process where some of the marshmallow's sugar is burnt and carbon dioxide is released into the air.
Yes, anything that burns (combust) is a chemical change
That would be a chemical change.
When roasting a marshmallow over a fire, chemical energy stored in the marshmallow is converted to thermal energy as the marshmallow heats up and starts to melt and brown. This is an example of energy transformation from chemical energy to thermal energy.
chemicalBurning a marshmallow is a chemical change.
Yes. You still have marshmallow at the end of the cut so it must be physical. If you burnt the marshmallow, that would be chemical.
Toasting a marshmallow is actually a chemical change. The marshmallow becomes black and crispy, it also no longer tastes the same. Thus, it is a chemical change.Roasting a marshmallow is an example of a chemical change. Generally when you heat food in the process of cooking, you will cause a chemical change.
Physical change.
physical