No, chemical.
Changing the color of an apple is a chemical change because it involves a chemical reaction that alters the molecular structure of the apple's pigments, such as when the apple oxidizes and turns brown.
it is a chemical change
No, cutting an apple in half is not a chemical change. Cutting an apple is doing nothing but changing the shape and form of the apple, but in the end, it's still an apple.
cooking an apple is causing a physical change because in a physical change, the IDENTITY of the substance never changes. (identity=atomic makeup. in a chemical change, the IDENTITY does change, due to a chemical reaction. because there is no change in the identity of the apple, baking it is a physical change
When an apple rots, it's more of a chemical change. Sure, you can SEE the change in it..but the look, is not the actual change. It is a chemical change, catalysed by an organism. The apple wouldn't rot, if there were no chemical change.
An apple turning brown is both a chemical and a physical change. Physically it changes appearance by turning brown. Chemically it oxidizes when the air comes in contact with the enzymes and chemicals in the fruit.
It is both physical and chemical change as it changes its appearance , and it results in a new substance also
Changing the color of an apple is a chemical change because it involves a chemical reaction that alters the molecular structure of the apple's pigments, such as when the apple oxidizes and turns brown.
Cutting an apple is a physical change
it is a chemical change
This is a physical change. You only change the shape and size of an apple by slicing it. Chemical changes would mean changing the molecular composition of the apple.
Physical because it is still a apple just a part of it
The sliced apple turning brown is a chemical change, not a physical property. It is a result of a chemical reaction between the compounds in the apple and oxygen in the air, leading to the formation of new compounds that give the apple its brown color.
It is a physical change because while the apple is cut into smaller pieces, it is still composed of the same materials. If you lit the apple on fire, that would result in a chemical change.
Physical change because you're just changing the shape of the apple, and not making the apple into a new substance
No, cutting an apple in half is not a chemical change. Cutting an apple is doing nothing but changing the shape and form of the apple, but in the end, it's still an apple.
cooking an apple is causing a physical change because in a physical change, the IDENTITY of the substance never changes. (identity=atomic makeup. in a chemical change, the IDENTITY does change, due to a chemical reaction. because there is no change in the identity of the apple, baking it is a physical change