Decide whether each change is physical or chemical and label it with the correct term. Look for evidence of new substances with new properties.
HighLighter PopupUnderline Selected TextGreen Color HighlightOrange Color HighlightYellow Color HighlightBlue Color HighlightPink Color HighlightRemove Color Highlight
Chemical
Chemical
Physical
Physical
Top left field, under cookies ingredients and cookiesTop right field, under water and ice cubesBottom left field, under butter and melted butterBottom right field, under nail and rusted nailFour images: first, a bowl of flour, a stick of butter, and two eggs pointing to a plate of cookies; second, a glass of water pointing to ice cubes; third, a stick of butter pointing to melted butter; fourth, a nail pointing to a rusted nail
The chemical properties of a substance change during a chemical reaction, meaning the substance undergoes a chemical change and forms new substances with different properties. The physical properties may also change, such as color, texture, or state of matter.
A chemical reaction will result in a product with not only chemical properties (which are different than the reactants), but also physical properties (which are also different from the reactants).
Copper is a chemical element, so it is considered a substance with distinct chemical properties, not a physical property. Its physical properties include being a solid at room temperature, having a distinct color and density, while its chemical properties include its ability to react with other substances and form different compounds.
Properties used to describe matter include physical properties (such as color, shape, and state) and chemical properties (such as reactivity, flammability, and toxicity). These properties help us classify and identify different types of matter based on their characteristics and behavior.
Physical properties are generally easier to recognize compared to chemical properties because physical properties can be observed or measured without changing the substance's chemical composition. Examples of physical properties include color, size, shape, density, and melting point.
No. Chemical and physical properties are different.
Physical and chemical properties change as the result of a chemical change, which produces new products with different physical and chemical properties than the reactants.
its different because physical it bruoght on by us and chemical is different particles from once was a different substance.
The chemical properties of a substance change during a chemical reaction, meaning the substance undergoes a chemical change and forms new substances with different properties. The physical properties may also change, such as color, texture, or state of matter.
A chemical reaction will result in a product with not only chemical properties (which are different than the reactants), but also physical properties (which are also different from the reactants).
Because reactants and products have different chemical compositions and consequently different chemical and physical properties.
Each salt has a different chemical composition and consequently different chemical and physical properties.
A chemical reaction changes the chemical properties of substances involved by forming new substances with different chemical compositions. This can result in changes in physical properties such as color, temperature, odor, and state of matter.
Because an element is an element and a molecule is a molecule; they are different chemical entities and of course they have different chemical and physical properties.
In a physical change the object changes appearance but in a chemical change the object turns into something different with different properties.
The differences in chemical properties are not significant (excepting protium and deuterium); the physical properties are different.
The chemical and physical properties of a compound are different than those of the elements from which it is formed.