No, it will not. Broken glass is still (the same) glass.
Any link between the breaking of a mirror and the chemical properties of a product.
The properties of a metal are of follows, a pure chemical composition, a pure chemical composition is a element, or a compound in pure form. As well as a metallic luster (when it is shiny and if melted or filed flat it looks like a mirror. Now pure chemical composition is hard to test with solid metal, but a metallic luster should do the trick usually, and if it is being melted, than you should see that is is a pure chemical composition by looking if parts of it have different melting speeds.
No, not really. All molecules of the same type have all the same (chemical) properties. But there is a little note; there are molecules that are each other mirror image, just like your hands are, they are exactly the same but you cant turn it til they are the same, in chemistry we call that 'stereochemistry'. The chemical properties are mostly te same, but for example, some medicine has one or more chiral centers and in the most cases there is only one isomer which give the best results.
The creation of "mist" or steam (condensation) from water is exothermic but the mirror is not experiencing any kind of chemical reaction.
The definition of "Medium" is the material that something is made of. So, a mirror can be made of any material that can be polished enough to be reflective. For example, Metal, Plastic, Glass, even Water can have mirror properties. You may wish to restate your question?
Any link between the breaking of a mirror and the chemical properties of a product.
No. After breaking the mirror, the chemical properties of the remaining pieces are the same as the intact mirror. This is a physical change, not a chemical change.
Breaking a mirror does not cause a change in the chemical properties of the mirror itself. The act of breaking the mirror may result in physical changes, such as the mirror's fragments having sharp edges, but the chemical composition of the mirror remains the same. Mirrors are typically made of a layer of reflective material, like silver or aluminum, which is deposited on the glass surface, and breaking the mirror does not alter this composition.
No, thats a physical property because it can't be reversed and there is no actually chemical change.
7 Years of Bad Luck for Breaking a Mirror
It is said that seven years' bad luck will result from breaking a mirror.
The properties of a metal are of follows, a pure chemical composition, a pure chemical composition is a element, or a compound in pure form. As well as a metallic luster (when it is shiny and if melted or filed flat it looks like a mirror. Now pure chemical composition is hard to test with solid metal, but a metallic luster should do the trick usually, and if it is being melted, than you should see that is is a pure chemical composition by looking if parts of it have different melting speeds.
There Are basically no specific properties, just that it'll form an image. But if you're talking about properties of the ray striking a plane mirror, there're numerous:):)
There Are basically no specific properties, just that it'll form an image. But if you're talking about properties of the ray striking a plane mirror, there're numerous:):)
It is bad luck to break a mirror. There is no not bad luck in breaking a mirror.
virtual
There is none.