At room temperature, the physical properties of substances can change. For example, some substances may melt, freeze, evaporate, or condense. These changes can affect properties like color, texture, and state of matter.
You get a mixture.
Chemical properties describe how a substance can form new substances by undergoing chemical reactions, like flammability or reactivity. Physical properties describe characteristics that can be observed without changing the substance's identity, like color, density, or melting point.
The chemical properties of a substance change during a chemical reaction, meaning the substance undergoes a chemical change and forms new substances with different properties. The physical properties may also change, such as color, texture, or state of matter.
During a physical change, the substance's form or state may alter, but its chemical composition remains the same. This means no new substances are formed, and the change is usually reversible by physical means such as heating, cooling, or mixing with other substances. Examples include melting, freezing, boiling, or dissolving.
A physical change is a change of state that does not affect the properties of the substance. Example: Ice melting to water. It's still water, just in a different form. A chemical change is a change of properties in a substance, which creates* a new substance. This happens when two substances combine. Example: Lighting a peice of paper on fire. When this happens, the fire and the paper put together creates ash. *Note: You can not create or destroy mass, only change it. Example: If the paper weighed 1 g before it's burning, it will weigh the same after.
You get a mixture.
Chemical properties describe how a substance can form new substances by undergoing chemical reactions, like flammability or reactivity. Physical properties describe characteristics that can be observed without changing the substance's identity, like color, density, or melting point.
When substances combine and retain their own properties, the result is a mixture.
Mixing can result in various outcomes depending on the substances involved. It can lead to a chemical reaction producing new compounds, a physical combination of substances without altering their properties, or a breakdown of components into simpler forms. Factors such as the type of substances, their reactivity, and conditions of mixing (e.g., temperature, pressure) determine the result.
The chemical properties of a substance change during a chemical reaction, meaning the substance undergoes a chemical change and forms new substances with different properties. The physical properties may also change, such as color, texture, or state of matter.
During a physical change, the substance's form or state may alter, but its chemical composition remains the same. This means no new substances are formed, and the change is usually reversible by physical means such as heating, cooling, or mixing with other substances. Examples include melting, freezing, boiling, or dissolving.
Temperature remains constant
the specific heats of the substances are identical the particels will not react chemically the substances have equal theraml energies the substances have equal temps hop it helped sorry if it didnt
The Substances die
It is a physical process, not a chemical reaction.
When something cools, its temperature decreases, causing the molecules in the material to slow down and move closer together. This can lead to changes in physical properties, such as solidification or contraction.
It is a physical process, not a chemical reaction.