They do not have the same set of physical properties. At the very least they have different melting and boiling points, and different densities, and their colors are not identical.
Chemical properties involve reacting with another substance. IE: burning of magnesium requires oxygen after which it is no longer magnesium. Physical properties do not. IE: metals are malleable, some very malleable, like copper wire can be bent with your hand. BUT it is still copper wire.
Density is a physical property of copper.
chemical - due to copper contact with oxygen copper oxide
This is a physical change.
Shape
copper and oxygen
I believe you mean copper. Copper is not a property; it is an element with physical and chemical properties.
Copper has both chemical and physical properties. You will need to specify which property you are asking about
All physical and chemical properties are different.
If you meant to ask, "Is stretching copper into wire a physical or chemical change", it's a physical change.
Samples of platinum and copper can have the same extensive properties but not the same intensive properties for a couple of reasons. These are both metals but have differing numbers of electrons.
Chemical properties involve reacting with another substance. IE: burning of magnesium requires oxygen after which it is no longer magnesium. Physical properties do not. IE: metals are malleable, some very malleable, like copper wire can be bent with your hand. BUT it is still copper wire.
No. Copper (the metal, an element) has chemical properties. The shape of the copper (wire) does not affect it's chemical behavior.
chemical or physical WHAT?
No this will not make a chemical change because if you put copper in baking soda it will make a physical change because it is not changing any of the properties inside the copper.
Chemical, the resultant molecules have different structures and properties.
Copper sulfate is a substance, not a change. It can undergo physical and chemical changes.