no, physical
You must understand that water can be in any one of three PHYSICAL states, liquid, solid or vapor ( a gas ).
Changing physical states is not a chemical change, but a direct result of heat or cold application.
Freezing water is an example of a physical change because the material contents of the water has not changed.
No, it is only a physical change since the chemical properties of alcohol do not change.
Carving pumpkin physical change or chemical change
Freezing is a physical change.
physical
Physical change, seeing as how none of the chemical makeup of the water is changed.
No, That would be a physical change....A chemical change would be for like example: Water Evaporting, Water Boiling, Water Freezing...etc
Freezing is a physical change, not a chemical reaction. When a substance freezes, its molecules slow down and arrange into a solid structure. Chemical reactions involve the rearrangement of atoms to form new substances with different chemical properties.
Because the chemical formula remain the same - liquid water or ice or vapour.
Freezing is a phase transition and does not change the chemical makeup of H2O. (melting restores). Electrolysis changes the chemical structure of the water, decomposing the H2O into oxygen (O2) and hydrogen gas (H2).
Yes, water freezing at 0 degrees is a physical change. It involves a change in state from liquid to solid without altering the chemical composition of water.
Freezing is a physical change.