No, it is a Physical Change.
Physical Changes are concerned with energy and states of matter. A physical change does not produce a new substance. Changes in state or phase (condensation, melting, freezing, vaporization, sublimation) are physical changes. Other examples of physical changes include crushing a can, melting ice, and breaking a bottle.
Chemical changes take place on the molecular level. A Chemical Change produces a new substance. Some examples of chemical changes include combustion (burning) and rusting of a metal.
The process of changing matter from the gaseous state to the liquid state is called condensing. A common example of condensation is steam from a hot shower condensing into water on the cooler bathroom mirror.
It would be both. It's a physical change because it is changing state and a chemical change because water is being evaporated.
It is a physical change because the change is reversible.
Chemical. The hydrogen peroxide breaks down into water and elemental oxygen. Two new substances are created.
Yes. Dissolving drink mix does not change its chemical composition.
water condensing is a physical change.
physical change
This is a physical change, because the rainfall will eventually change back into water vapor. It is still has the same chemical makeup.
Condensation is a purely physical process (a change of phase). Water evaporating or condensing does not change its molecular composition (H2O).
Physical. It was water before condensing, and it is water after. All that changed is energy was lost that allowed a phase change.
Physical, any change in stat of matter (Water vapor/gas to water/liquid) Is a Physical change.
No, condensing is a physical change, not a chemical change. It is the process of changing a substance from a gas state to a liquid state by removing heat energy.
no because there is no change in the molecular aspect and it will soon go back to water as rain.
Evaporating seawater is a physical change. Physical changes affect the form, but not the chemical makeup of a substance. The sea water is undergoing a change in states of matter, not a chemical reaction. You can undo the change by condensing the evaporated water .
Freezing (melting, boiling, condensing) are always phycal changes (of matter)
It's not !... It's a physical change. Chemically - whether water is frozen into ice, is liquid as water or a vapour (steam) - it's still the same substance.
Nope- physical change. It is still water, but chaged to a gas. It can be changed back to a liquid by condensing it from the air.