Carbon from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide. Thehydrogen from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form water vapor.
No it is a chemical property
Neither - but when it does burn it's a chemical change.
Only if you put a chemical on it to burn it. like gasoline for example
Yes, a chemical property of gasoline is its flammability, which means it can easily ignite and burn in the presence of an oxidizer like oxygen. When gasoline burns, it undergoes a chemical reaction known as combustion, producing heat, light, carbon dioxide, and water vapor. This property is what makes gasoline a suitable fuel for engines and other combustion processes.
Chemical Energy. Chemical energy is converted to thermal energy when people burn wood in a fireplace or burn gasoline in a car's engine.
Gasoline starts to burn at 495 F.
it is a chemical change because it causing the fuel to burn
Gasoline has various chemical properties (particularly, it burns very well) and its combustion products have other chemical properties (they don't burn as well) but it would not be correct to say that gasoline in any sense BECOMES a chemical property. Chemicals have properties, they don't become properties.
Yes, as well as anything else that you can burn. The foods we eat also have chemical energy.
gasoline combined with air will explode, gasoline won't burn without air the fumes mixed with air will explode but the gasolin will burn
Gasoline burning is a chemical property because it involves a chemical reaction where gasoline is combined with oxygen to produce heat, light, and exhaust gases. This process results in a change in the chemical composition of the gasoline.
there are chemical energies in gasoline