Yes, it is. You are SO DUMB.
^^ok, that was REALLY rude of whoever said that...
Yes, it is a chemical property. I had trouble with that too. A way that helps to think about it is a chemical property is anything that would change the chemical makeup should it occur (combustion would. putting a chemical in water would, changing the pH would). Melting and boiling point don't change the chemical makeup (freezing, melting, or boiling Mercury doesn't change the fact that it is mercury) but combustion changes the element into something else and produces other elements or observable reactions (if you combusted mercury, it wouldn't be mercury anymore!). I hope that helped!
Stating that something is flammable is stating a chemical property. But the actual burning would be a chemical change.
Combustibility is a chemical property that can give off heat, such as in the process of burning wood or fuels.
A physical property of wood is a characteristic that can be observed or measured without changing the wood's chemical composition, such as its density or color. A chemical property of wood involves how it interacts with other substances to undergo a chemical change, such as its ability to burn or react with certain chemicals.
Yes, melting point is a physical property, not a chemical property. It is a characteristic of a substance that can help identify and differentiate it from other substances based on how it changes states from solid to liquid.
Burning wood is a chemical process because it involves a chemical reaction between the wood and oxygen in the air to produce heat, light, and new chemical compounds such as carbon dioxide and water vapor.
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Chemical property; flammability implies ease of burning, and burning is a chemical change.
Boiling point is a physical property, as it refers to the temperature at which a substance changes from a liquid to a gas without altering its chemical composition. In contrast, chemical stability and reactivity are related to how a substance behaves in chemical reactions, which involves changes in its chemical structure. Burning point, often referred to as flash point, also pertains to a physical property related to combustion but is more specific to flammability.
Boiling point is a physical property, as it describes the temperature at which a substance transitions from a liquid to a gas without changing its chemical composition. Reactivity, burning point, and chemical stability are related to how a substance interacts with other substances and its behavior under certain conditions, making them chemical properties.
Burning is a chemical process, not a property.
No, it is a chemical property
Burning is an example of a chemical property because it can only be observed during a chemical reaction called combustion.
Flammability is a chemical property; burning is a change.
When a substance melts, it changes state from solid to liquid. This does not alter the substance's chemical composition, so melting point is a physical property. Flammability means burning, and when a substance burns, it reacts with oxygen to produce a new substance that was not there before. This is therefore a chemical property.
It is a chemical change.
No, inflamabillity is a chemical property, because burning (of anything) is a chemical change.
Gasoline burning is a chemical property because it involves a chemical reaction where gasoline is combined with oxygen to produce heat, light, and exhaust gases. This process results in a change in the chemical composition of the gasoline.