Physical. Melting is always a physical change.
Yes, matter can undergo both physical and chemical changes simultaneously. For example, when a candle burns, the wax undergoes both a physical change (melting) and a chemical change (combustion) at the same time.
No, melting always is physical.As to the previous answer: reacting gold with an acid is not melting but oxidation.
Melting butter in a pan is a physical change. It involves a change in state from solid to liquid without altering the chemical composition of the butter.
Shortening melting is a physical change, not a chemical change or chemical property. When shortening melts, it undergoes a change in state from solid to liquid without any change in its chemical composition.
No, melting of lead is a physical change, not a chemical reaction. A chemical reaction involves the breaking and forming of chemical bonds to create new substances, while melting only involves a change in state from solid to liquid with no change in chemical composition.
Irreversible chemical change.
Physical
Yes, matter can undergo both physical and chemical changes simultaneously. For example, when a candle burns, the wax undergoes both a physical change (melting) and a chemical change (combustion) at the same time.
no- melting is not a chemical change. It is merely a change in state of the same substance not a chemical reaction.
Yes it is.
Melting is a physical change.
Melting is a physical change.
Melting snowflakes is a physical change, not a chemical change. The water molecules in the snowflake remain the same chemical composition before and after melting, they just change from a solid to a liquid state.
physical change according to physics nd chemical change according to chemistry
that is because salt is a physical matter
No, melting always is physical.As to the previous answer: reacting gold with an acid is not melting but oxidation.
Melting is a physical change.