There is no such thing. Either a thing changes, or it doesn't change. If it doesn't change, it is said to be conserved.
Antoine Lavoisier, in 1789.
No because the law of conservation of matter clearly states that matter can NOT be created or destroyed. It can only change it's form.
The law of conservation of mass states that the total mass of substances in a closed system remains constant over time, regardless of the changes that occur within the system. This principle was discovered by Antoine Lavoisier, a French chemist, in the late 18th century.
Not "change", but "charge". Conservation of charge means that the total charge in a closed system can't change.
albert Einstein
i think it was made in 1925 but not sure :)
Antoine Lavoisier: Developed the Law of Conservation of Mass. We don't really know who discovered it. Hope that answered it...:)
The conservation of matter.
Mikhail Lomonosov and Antoine Lavoisier are both credited with experiments that led to the formulation of the Law of Mass Conservation. The experiments involved rusting or melting metals inside sealed containers. The weight of these containers did not change despite the contents having changed.
conservation
metamorphic
There is no one "law of conservation", there are several laws, such as conservation of energy, conservation of mass, conservation of electric charge, conservation of rotational momentum, etc.What is always true is that there is SOME quantity that doesn't change in the case of a closed system.