No, its a physical change. It make be changing from a solid to a liquid, but it is not changing at a chemical level, only at a physical level. No matter how you slice it, it is still ice cream (but maybe a little drippy).
No. It is purely a physical change, that of melting. No chemical reaction takes place.
Melting ice cream is a physical change because it has the ability to go back to it's frozen form and be ice cream again. The chemical identity of it isn't changed.
No, the melting of plastic is not a chemical reaction. This is because there is just a temperature change, which happens to change solid to liquid. The solid remains the same element with the same properties, and no "new substance" is formed.
Making ice cream from sugar and cream involves both chemical and physical changes. The mixing and freezing of the ingredients results in a physical change as the state of matter changes from liquid to solid. At the same time, the reaction between the sugar and cream, as well as any added flavorings, involves chemical changes that alter the composition of the ingredients.
Change in the state of matter is physical change .A good example of physical change in matter is water that is in liquid state can become solid in frozen state as ice and vapor in gaseous state
No. It is purely a physical change, that of melting. No chemical reaction takes place.
yes because every thing that is in ice cream makes it not be a chemical.
No ice- cream melting is not a chemical reaction, because with a chemical reaction it is hard to get back the original form. But with ice cream melting that is a physical change because you can easily freeze the ice cream again and get it back to normal un-melted ice cream.
Melting is a physical process.
Melting ice cream is a physical change because it has the ability to go back to it's frozen form and be ice cream again. The chemical identity of it isn't changed.
Melting ice cream is a physical change because it has the ability to go back to it's frozen form and be ice cream again. The chemical identity of it isn't changed.
The melting of ice cream is a physical change. It involves a phase change from solid to liquid, without any new substances being formed. The chemical composition of the ice cream remains the same before and after melting.
Melting an ice cream bar is a physical change because it involves a phase transition from solid to liquid without changing the chemical composition of the ice cream.
No, the melting of plastic is not a chemical reaction. This is because there is just a temperature change, which happens to change solid to liquid. The solid remains the same element with the same properties, and no "new substance" is formed.
I Think its because to the chemical in moisture cream that make chemical reaction in pillow...
They're both physical changes. Phase changes are always physical changes. Chemical changes only involve chemical reactions - a change in the identity of the substance. That's why phase changes are physical changes. Ice cream remains ice cream when it melts.
A physical change is something that can be reversed (as opposed to a chemical change which cannot be). You can reverse melting an ice cream bar, by freezing it. Thus it's a physical change. Yes it is a physical change.