chemical- the outcome of something**- fire, aka combustability.
physical- something you hear, smell, taste, etc.- the "boom"
**not sure. (:
Being ductile, malleable, freezing, melting are some examples of physical changes of a substance. Physical changes do not form a new substance while chemical changes do. Examples of chemical changes are a rusting nail and combustion.
Physical changes can range from colour changes to change in tempricture.
no. Those are physical changes.
Chemical : cooking (not heating [especially in the microwave]). Physical : making ice cubes.
non example of chemical change: one non example is ice. ice is NOT an example of chemical change.
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.
By explosion, you mean combustion I presume. Because combustion is a type of reaction, explosions are chemical changes.
Chemical Changes the substance and physical really dont change it as much examples of chemical: burning wood, physical: painting it Physical is basically changing color, looks,
There are no physical changes. there are only chemical changes.
A physical change is a change that does not change the chemical makeup of the substance. This can be crushing, tearing, or a phase change for example. A chemical change changes the chemical makeup of the substance. Some examples of this are rusting, combustion, or digestion.
Examples of chemical changes: * Burning of paper * Rusting of iron Examples of physical reactions: * Melting of ice * Melting of wax
Physical Changes