It is a physical change.
The melting of ice to form water is a physical change. It involves a change in state from solid to liquid, but the chemical composition of the substance remains the same.
Yes. No chemical change has taken place, only a physical change. It can be undone (liquid water can be re-frozen)
When a cube of ice melts to form water, it undergoes a physical change. This is because the substance remains water in both states, but changes from a solid form (ice) to a liquid form (water) due to a change in temperature.
Physical Change
it is a chemical change
When a chocolate bar melts in the sun, it is a physical change. This is because the chocolate undergoes a phase change from a solid to a liquid without changing its chemical composition.
It is a physical change. There is no chemical reaction whatsoever.
When ice melts, it undergoes a physical change, not a chemical change. The molecules in the ice are still the same water molecules, but they are transitioning from a solid state to a liquid state.
No, melting is a physical change, not a chemical change. When the sun heats up and melts a crayon, it changes from a solid to a liquid state, but the chemical composition of the crayon remains the same.
It is a physical reaction. Melting is a physical change because it does not change the chemical composition of the substance.
no unless there is a chemical change but there isn't. only a physical change has occurred
When sodium melts, it undergoes a physical change. This is because the change in state from solid to liquid does not alter the chemical composition of the sodium itself. It remains as sodium in both the solid and liquid states.