Biodegradable
Any biological material.
Heat can sometimes break the chemical bonds of atoms.
The atoms will break into half :)
During a chemical reaction, the bonds between the atoms of the reactants break, and new bonds form to make the products.
when atoms break their old links and form new links with other atoms it is called chemical reaction
Yes, an atom can break or split. This is the concept behind the atom bomb.
Atoms can decay naturally but they are generally broken by human power. Atoms can also break during a collision with another atom in an atomic fission or fusion reaction.
Atoms break by human power as well as naturally. Atoms break constantly as part of nature but they also are broken through man made processes like nuclear fusion.
No. Atoms never, ever break in chemical reactions. Molecules break if you want to see atoms break, look up nuclear reactions
Something that will break down naturally is called bio-degradable.
Heat can sometimes break the chemical bonds of atoms.
Biodegradable materials will rot, weather, or rust and 'return to nature'. Wood, paper, and even most metals are biodegradable to various degrees. Nonbiodegradable materials will not break down naturally. Most plastics and synthetic materials are nonbiodegradable.
The hydrogen bonds break.
No, steel is not biodegradable. It is a metal alloy primarily composed of iron and carbon, which does not break down naturally in the environment. Steel can be recycled and reused, but it does not biodegrade like organic materials.
Your water will break naturally. To induce it would be to artificially break it.
when atoms break their old links and form new links with other atoms it is called chemical reaction
The atoms will break into half :)
Yes you can break the bonds between atoms and after they are broken they can also reform themselfs.