The solubility of a substance in water is primarily determined by its chemical composition rather than its physical properties.
No, it is a physical change. The water and gasoline retain their chemical and physical properties.
No. Chemical and physical properties are different.
Physical and chemical properties change as the result of a chemical change, which produces new products with different physical and chemical properties than the reactants.
The chemical change is the burning wood because the products, carbon dioxide, water, ash, and soot, have different physical and chemical properties. The other changes are physical changes because the physical and chemical properties of the substances did not change.
Yes, the chemical properties of water will stay the same even when the physical properties are being changed (phase change).
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Because molecules have other chemical and physical properties than the containing atoms !
No, salt will (physically) dissolve in water, without changing chemical properties
A chemical change is when the chemical properties of a substance changes and a physical change is when the chemical properties stay the same but the physical properties (shape, temperature etc...)
This is a physical change. The bubbles are pockets of steam which is the same chemical as water, just in a different state.
Copper has both chemical and physical properties. Chemical properties refer to how copper reacts with other substances, while physical properties refer to characteristics like its color, density, and conductivity.