physical change
No, if a new material forms that would be a chemical change. Physical changes always remain with the same material you began with.
It may change its measurable properties but a simple state change is brought on by an increase or decrease the energy content of the material and does not alter the material from one material to another.
Chemical change :D
It is called a Physical Change
A change in velocity constitutes a change in direction because velocity includes direction.
No. However, the way in which it is described - in particular, what constitutes its base - may change.
physical change
If there is no chemical reaction occurring in the solution as a result of heating then this scenario constitutes a phase change.
Often you can make a material change state by heating or cooling it
"A physical change occurs when some of the properties of a material change, but the substances in the material remain the same." "...any actions that change the size and shape of a material, but not its composition." if the shape/form is changed but not its makeup, then that change is physical
No, if a new material forms that would be a chemical change. Physical changes always remain with the same material you began with.
no
It may change its measurable properties but a simple state change is brought on by an increase or decrease the energy content of the material and does not alter the material from one material to another.
It can depend on the specific context, but generally, groups may be more likely to change their material culture before their non-material culture. This is because material culture, such as tools or technology, can be more visibly and tangibly altered, while non-material culture, such as beliefs or values, may be more deeply ingrained and take longer to shift.
Wood is a material. It is not a change.
Chemical change :D