Intensive, as solubility is a chemical property having to do with whether a compound is ionic, covalent-polar, or covalent non-polar.
Boiling point is an intensive property.
it has a great soluble property
Density is a physical property that does not change even if the sample of the size changes. For example, if water weighs 1 pound per cup (density = 1lb/cup), it doesn't matter if you have 10 cups of water or 100, the water will still weight 1 per per cup.
Yes it is because no chemical reaction occurs during it so it is not chemical.
The freezing point is an intensive property, not dependent on the amount of of material.
Freezing water is an intensive property.
Boiling point is an intensive property.
The properties of a substance can be divided up into two basic kinds: Intensive properties are those that do not depend on how much of the substance you have. For example, the boiling point is an intensive property: water boils at the same temperature no matter if you have 1 gram, 10 grams or 100,000 kilograms of water. Other examples of intensive properties include density, solubility, color, and melting point. Extensive properties depend on the amount of the substance. For example, the volume of a sample is an extensive property: 100 grams of water takes up more volume than 1 gram of water. Mass is also an extensive property.
Boiling point of water is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of the substance present. Water will always boil at 100 degrees Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure regardless of how much water is being heated.
Melting of ice is a physical change where solid ice turns into liquid water without changing its chemical composition. Boiling water is another physical change where liquid water turns into water vapor without any change in chemical properties.
no
An intensive property (also called a bulk property), is a physical property of a system that does not depend on the system size or the amount of material in the system. An extensive property of a system is directly proportional to the system size or the amount of material in the system. Since humidity is a measure of the composition of the atmosphere - specifically the amount of water vapor, it would be considered INTENSIVE. The only way it could be considered EXTENSIVE would be if you were to consider the earth a closed system and you were interested in how much of the water was in the oceans, lakes, rivers snowpack, ground, air, Evian bottles etc. In that case, the humidity would vary with the size of the system - the value would depend on whether you were taking a sample in a closed room or taking the entire air mass over the Pacific Ocean. Even then, the average value would still be an intensive property.
An extensive property DOES depend on the amount of substance. So, temperature is an INTENSIVE property, and the value measured in 200 ml will be the same as that measured in 1 ml or 1000 ml of the same water.
An intensive physical property does not depend on the size of the sample. An example of an intensive physical property is density. An extensive physical property does depend on the size of the sample, such as mass and volume.
No, the process of something dissolving in water is a physical property rather than a chemical property. It involves a physical change where a substance disperses uniformly in water without changing its chemical composition.
An intensive property is one in which the property of matter does not change as the amount changes. A sentance could be: The intensive property of the liquid did not appear different even though we added more water to the container.
property of dissolving of a substance in water is known as solubility