Yes, rotting is considered to be a physical change. However, it's also considered to be a chemical change as well.
both, because the ingredients are undergoing both physical and chemical changes such as: Butter melting= physical change Egg whites hardening= chemical change both, because the ingredients are undergoing both physical and chemical changes such as: Butter melting= physical change Egg whites hardening= chemical change
A physical property is a measurable characteristic of an item that is determined by its appearance. A sentence with it would be "More than one physical property of the substance changed when it became a gas."
A physical property is any characteristic of a material that can be observed or/and measured without changing the identity.A physical change is the change in which the properties of a substance change but the identity always stays the same.
Yes.
In chemistry, a physical change would be from Gas to Liquid (or reverse), or Liquid to Solid (or reverse).
its a physical change
Chemical Because physical is when you change it your self
a chemical change because that cirtain substance is rotting :)
It is a chemical change.
Chemical change
chemical
The act of burying garbage itself is not really a physical change. If the garbage was crushed, that would be a physical change. When the garbage decomposes in the ground, that is a chemical change.
Evaporation is a physical change: a change of state that is reversible.
It is a chemical change.
It's a chemical change
no. Rotting fruit is just changing the form of the fruit not making an entirely new substance. So, it is a physical change. Sorry ... rotting is a chemical change - the bacteria and molds are "eating" the fruit and changeing it into the eqivalent of poo. Drying fruit would be mostly a physical change.
no because its not changing into a new substance. actually its a physical change