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No. You must not confuse the PROCESS of converting some chemical products to others, with the RESULT. The PROCESS of converting wood and oxygen to smoke is a chemical change. The SMOKE itself is not.
Chemical taxonomy is a scientific classification of organisms based on the distribution of their natural products. This classification process involves photo-chemical data.
By forcing electrodes through the positive terminal of the battery which becomes the anode in the recharge process of a battery
They can be reversed by physical changes...
Chemical, I belive; after such a decomposition, the plant can't return to its original form.
The purpose is the fabrication of chemical products.
chemical reaction
EQUILIBRIUM
Reactants and products stop forming.
Electrolysis
Pestides, fertilizers, etc. for agriculture are chemical products. Foods fabrication in industry is a chemical process.
You can not really recharge the water cycle, it is an ongoing natural process.
The formation of gas is:- a chemical process if the gas is the product of a chemical reaction- a physical process if the gas is the product of a change of phase as sublimation and vaporization
No. You must not confuse the PROCESS of converting some chemical products to others, with the RESULT. The PROCESS of converting wood and oxygen to smoke is a chemical change. The SMOKE itself is not.
Chemical taxonomy is a scientific classification of organisms based on the distribution of their natural products. This classification process involves photo-chemical data.
A process in which the reactants form products with different chemical compositions is generally a chemical change. It is also often harder to change the products of a chemical reaction back into the reactants, than it is for a physical change. For instance, burning a log would be a chemical change; you don't have wood after you burn the log, you have carbon dioxide, soot, etc., and you can't get the wood back by reversing the process.
By forcing electrodes through the positive terminal of the battery which becomes the anode in the recharge process of a battery