If you add heat to matter, it can either get it hotter, or it can change the state of matter (for example, from solid to liquid).
Yes, that is correct. A physical change is a change in a substance that does not involve changing its chemical composition. This can include changes in size, shape, or state of matter without altering the substance's fundamental makeup.
You can change the state of matter of a substance by applying heat to it. When you heat a solid, it melts into a liquid. When you heat a liquid, it evaporates into a gas. This process is known as melting and boiling.
To change one state of matter to another, you need to either add or remove heat energy. For example, to change a solid to a liquid, you would need to add heat energy to melt the solid. Similarly, to change a liquid to a gas, you would need to add heat energy to evaporate the liquid.
That is a physical change. The chemical composition of the substance does not change during a physical change, only its physical properties like size, shape, or state of matter.
Heat is needed for matter to change form eg: Melting, condensation, etc.
If you add heat to matter, it can either get it hotter, or it can change the state of matter (for example, from solid to liquid).
a change in size, shape or the state of matter is a physical change. True for A+.
IT IS PHYSICAL change
A physical change in matter caused by a loss or gain of heat is called a thermal change.
size
mass doesn't change
By adding heat and removing heat.
Yes, matter can change its state when heat is added or removed. For example, adding heat to ice causes it to melt into water, while removing heat from water causes it to freeze into ice. This process is known as a phase change.
yes, it can bad maytee
chemical matter.
You have to heat it up.
one of them is the heat.