It is a chemical change because you can't change a fried egg into it's original, uncooked form. Like a log burned into ashes. You can't get ashes to change into it's own self - wood.
Yes.
A physical change is a change in which the appearance of an object changes but no chemical reaction takes place.EXAMPLES:CrushingMeltingEvaporationCondensation
PHYSICAL CHANGE 1. Aluminum foil is cut in half 2. Clay is molded into a new shape 3. Butter melts on warm toast 4. Water evaporates from the surface of the ocean 5. A juice box in the freezer freezes 6. Rubbing alcohol evaporates on your hand 7. Crumpled paper 8. Water turned into ice 9. Grating of cheese 10. Cutting of wood CHEMICAL CHANGE 1. Rust forms on a nail left outside 2. Milk goes sour 3. You fry an egg 4. Your body digests food 5. A match is lit 6. You take an antacid to settle your stomach 7. Hydrogen peroxide bubbles in a cut 8. Food scraps are turned into compost in a compost pile 9. Gasoline is ignited 10. Jewelry tarnishes
PHYSICAL CHANGE 1. Aluminum foil is cut in half 2. Clay is molded into a new shape 3. Butter melts on warm toast 4. Water evaporates from the surface of the ocean 5. A juice box in the freezer freezes 6. Rubbing alcohol evaporates on your hand 7. Crumpled paper 8. Water turned into ice 9. Grating of cheese 10. Cutting of wood CHEMICAL CHANGE 1. Rust forms on a nail left outside 2. Milk goes sour 3. You fry an egg 4. Your body digests food 5. A match is lit 6. You take an antacid to settle your stomach 7. Hydrogen peroxide bubbles in a cut 8. Food scraps are turned into compost in a compost pile 9. Gasoline is ignited 10. Jewelry tarnishes
If it was acidic your hair would dissolve and fry/sizzle etc.
chemical change.
Chemical. The chemical composition of the egg is changed when the egg is fryed, and cannot be reversed.
Frying an egg is a chemical change. The egg white turns white and solid as it is denatured, which cannot be reversed by physical means.
You can't really fry oil. You can heat oil, and you can use it to fry something else, such as an egg. Heating oil is a physical change, though prolonged heating causes chemical changes to occur too. The changes to the food are chemical.
You do, whenever you fry an egg.
Yes, frying an egg is an example of a chemical change that is the result of chemical reactions.
No Chemical changes are not reversible. If you fry an egg, you will see the white change from a liquid to a solid. How ever, when you remove the egg from pan, the white does not change back to liquid on your plate. The substances present have reacted chemically preventing a physical change from occurring.
No, it is a physical change. The proteins forming the substance of the egg "denature" above about 60 degrees Celsius. Proteins are complexly folded molecules and the vibration caused by the application of heat causes them to unravel - Once untraveled they tangle up to form a solid and the processes irreversible but because the change is a change in shape it is physical not chemical.
Yes, it turns to a solid and denaturation takes place.
Digesting french fries is both a physical and a chemical change. The chewing, pressing, and manipulating of the french fry is physical. The enzymes, bacterias, and acids breaking them down would be chemical.
a physical reaction is non-reversible e.g. when you bake a cake or fry an egg. a physical reaction is reversible e.g. when you melt ice or chocolate. i did this in chemistry today, ^-^ (but did you mean a chemical reaction?)
Digesting french fries is both a physical and a chemical change. The chewing, pressing, and manipulating of the french fry is physical. The enzymes, bacterias, and acids breaking them down would be chemical.