No
Yes, boiling point is a characteristic property of matter. It is called a characteristic property because no matter how much of a pure substance you have, the boiling point should remain the same. Therefore, it is a characteristic property of pure substances.
It doesn't matter how much of the liquid you have and it is a characteristic property.
This is the movement of molecules.
b physical property
No. Boiling point is an intensive physical property, which means it does not matter how large the sample is.
volume
It is a physical property. boiling is just evaporation and all it is is a change in matter from a solid to a gas, therefore being considered a physical change rather than chemical.
CONDUCTION
Yes, boiling point is a characteristic property of matter. It is called a characteristic property because no matter how much of a pure substance you have, the boiling point should remain the same. Therefore, it is a characteristic property of pure substances.
It doesn't matter how much of the liquid you have and it is a characteristic property.
This is the movement of molecules.
b physical property
When a substance is heated to its boiling point, the liquid begins to turn into a vapor. Thus, both phases of matter (liquid and vapor) will be present. Boiling point is the temperature at which atmospheric pressure equals the vapor pressure of the liquid. For this reason, the liquid is able to be released into the atmosphere as a gas.
Boiling point is a physical property. This is because when an element boils, it changes its state of matter, which is a physical change.
Matter is anything that has mass and occupies space. Now since it has mass and volume it has a density. The density again can lead to various states and these states lets us know the freezing and boiling points of matter. Thus density, boiling point and freezing point are the boiling point of matter.
No. Boiling point is an intensive physical property, which means it does not matter how large the sample is.
There are many properties of matter, including:ColorConductivity (electrical & heat)DensityHardnessLusterMelting & boiling pointsADD: All matter has mass and volume (takes up space). These are the two fundamental properties of matter.