No. Physical cause it hasn't changed its just gone from wet to dry :-)
No, a flying fish does not undergo a chemical change simply by flying. Chemical changes involve the formation of new substances with different chemical properties, which is not the case when a flying fish flies out of water.
Drying clothes involves a physical change rather than a chemical change. The water present in the wet clothes evaporates when exposed to heat or air, changing its state from liquid to gas without undergoing a chemical reaction.
It is a Physical Change because i dont know but im sure that is a physical change :P
Yes, the drying of fountain pen ink is a physical change rather than a chemical change. The ink dries through evaporation of the solvent, leaving behind the solute (pigments or dyes), which does not undergo a chemical reaction during the drying process.
Drying wood in a shed does not result in a chemical change because the process involves the removal of water through evaporation, which is a physical change. The structure and composition of the wood remain the same.
No.
Drying (involving only the water evaporation) is a physical change.
No.
Freeze-drying is a chemical change because it changes the actual composition of the object by removing water.
The drying itself is (always) a physical change.
yes
No new chemical bonds need to be formed or existing chemical bonds broken during drying.
Frying is a chemical process.
Answer: It is a chemical change, it changes the actual composition of the object by removing water.
It is a chemical change. Fermentation causes bonds to break within a compound and new bonds form thus chemically changing the initial 'reactant'.
Fish is an animal, not a change !
Physical, it is still H2O