Are those that do not depend on the amount of substances of the object.The most common intensive property is the color. Other intensive properties are hardness,brittleness,elasticity,malleability.ductility,porosity,viscosity,solubility,and density.
This answer is from an grade five student studying in Colegio De Santa Ana in Taguig Metro Manila 11/3/09
Intensive reading is reading with specific learning goals and tasks in mind. An example of intensive reading is: skimming a text for specific information in order to answer questions about the text.
An intensive property is one in which the property of matter does not change as the amount changes. A sentance could be: The intensive property of the liquid did not appear different even though we added more water to the container.
"regardless" has a meaning of "instead of' or "no matter where or what"
it is when u die
It means something like 'the heart of the matter,' or the truth of the matter.
In chemistry, an intensive property is a property that depends on the type of matter in a sample.
yes
Density is an intensive property because the size of the sample does not matter.
The density, and valence of an element do not depend on the amount.
The different between intensive properties and extensive properties is that one is depend on the amount of matter present and one is do not depend on the amount of matter of present.
"Extensive matter" refers to substances that have properties dependent on the amount of material present. These properties include mass, volume, and total energy, meaning they change when the quantity of the substance changes. In contrast to intensive properties, which remain constant regardless of the amount, extensive properties provide insight into the scale of the matter being considered.
chemical. Corrosion is a chemical reaction with the chemicals in the air.
Pressure is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of substance present. It is a state function, meaning it does not change with the quantity of the substance being measured.
Intensive properties of matter are independent of the amount of substance present, such as density and temperature, while extensive properties depend on the amount of substance, like mass and volume. Intensive properties are helpful in identifying substances regardless of their quantity, whereas extensive properties scale with the size of the system.
Smelling is an intensive property because the smell will always be the same no matter how much or little the amount is.
Intensive reading is reading with specific learning goals and tasks in mind. An example of intensive reading is: skimming a text for specific information in order to answer questions about the text.
In order to understand the examples, you have to understand intensive property. Intensive properties are physical properties of matter that don't depend on the present amount of property available. Examples include boiling point, density and state of matter or matter state.