Yes, as well as a chemical change.
It clearly changes (white, granulated sugar and liquid to burned brown sugar and liquid to a sticky [and delicious] substance). It changes from a solution to a syrup!
Caramelizing sugar is a chemical process; the chemical identity of the sugar is changed as it is caramelized.
The caramelizing of sugar is a chemical process.
No, it is a chemical
Chemical change .
chemical change
No
Physical
physical change
It's a physical change.
Its physical because the chemical properities of it doesn't change.
The thermal decomposition of baking powder is a chemical change.
It depends on what is boiling. If you are boiling WATER, then it is NOT a chemical change, it is a physical change (change of state from liquid to gas). If you are cooking food on the stove, a chemical change is occuring. That is, the chemical bonds within the food molecules are actually changing. One way you can tell that it is a chemical change is that you can't "uncook" food, but you can condense steam back into water.
Cooking oatmeal is a chemical change.
yes, cooking is a physical change. Mostly stuff that are cooked are chemical changes
Cooking is a chemical transformation.
Physical
physical change
Cooking is a chemical process.
It's a physical change.
no,it is chemical change
Cooking is a chemical process.
Physical change :D
It is as irreversible change, so it is chemical.
It is as irreversible change, so it is chemical.