Kiss muna
No, there is no transfer of matter when food coloring is heated. Food coloring is a dye that disperses evenly through a liquid and does not chemically react or change its composition when heated. The change in color is due to the molecules vibrating faster and spreading out in the liquid, not due to a transfer of matter.
Kiss muna
Yes, all waves carry energy but not matter. Waves transfer energy from one place to another but do not involve the physical displacement of matter.
Melanin is the coloring matter that gives your skin it's color called ?
Yes, conduction involves the transfer of heat through direct contact between particles in a material. The kinetic energy is transferred from the faster-moving particles to the slower-moving particles without the actual movement of matter.
Daniel M. Marmion has written: 'Handbook of U.S. colorants' -- subject(s): Coloring matter, Coloring matter in food
No, radiation does not require particles of matter as it can travel through a vacuum. Convection, on the other hand, does involve the transfer of heat through the actual movement of particles, such as in a gas or liquid.
conduction
Conduction
Some could be colorant, coloring, coloring matter, dye, dyestuff, oil, paint, stain, tincture, or tint.
False. EM Waves do not transfer matter, they transfer energy.
Energy transfer takes place by convection (the movement of hot air or other fluids due to diferences in densiity), conduction (transfer of heat through contact - caused by collisions between adjacent particles), or radiation (the transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves such as light or infra-red rays).Radiation requires matter to create and absorb the EM waves, (i.e. you need a hot object to give off the IR waves) but the waves themselves can travel through a vacuum, so do not require matter to transfer energy.