Your question is invalid, your question should be What is separated when a compound is heated, because heating a substance is basically adding energy to it.
and the energy is likely to separate compounds. For example when you add electricity(energy) to water it will separate water into oxygen and hydrogen. It will also apply for heat energy, If you add enough heat to separate the bond of water.
Yes, a continuous spectrum can be produced by a heated ionic compound. When an ionic compound is heated, electrons can be excited to higher energy levels, and as they return to their ground state, they emit light across a wide range of wavelengths, resulting in a continuous spectrum.
When copper is heated in oxygen, the compound formed is copper oxide.
The reaction is a decomposition reaction, where a single compound breaks down into two or more simpler substances when heated.
When iron filings and sulfur powder are heated together, they undergo a chemical reaction to form iron sulfide. The iron sulfide produced is a compound that has different physical and chemical properties compared to iron or sulfur alone.
The compound formed when magnesium and sulfur are heated is magnesium sulfide (MgS).
The bromine oxide decomposed into bromine and oxygen.
ptalonomy is a chemical compound produced by bacteria
Copper is the element responsible for the green flame produced in the Beilstein test. When a copper compound is heated in the presence of a flame, it emits a green color due to the presence of copper ions.
Oxygen is the element produced after photosynthesis.
It depends on what you added to the methanol before you put the heated copper wire into the methanol. The heated copper wire acted as a catalyst to speed up the reaction between the methanol and the other substance. Copper itself does not react with methanol.
a seed that pops when heated
Yes