Cheimical change
Burning is a chemical change.
Tearing paper represents a physical and not a chemical change. Chemical bonds are not broken in this instance, but paper is physically separated (by force) from other paper.
It is a physical change because it is still a sheet of paper.
Physical change
The decaying of burning paper involves both physical and chemical changes. When paper burns, it undergoes a chemical change as it reacts with oxygen, producing ash, smoke, and gases like carbon dioxide. The physical change occurs as the paper transforms from a solid to a gas and ash during combustion. Thus, the overall process is primarily a chemical change due to the formation of new substances.
No, cutting paper is a physical change, not a chemical change. The paper's chemical composition remains the same before and after cutting; only its physical shape is altered.
Physical.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
Physical change. The paper is still a piece of paper; nothing happened to the chemical composition of it.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
It is a physical change.
Coloring on a white piece of paper is a physical change because the color change is reversible and does not alter the chemical composition of the paper. The paper remains paper even after coloring on it.