yes, your adding heat.
Melting butter in a pan is an endothermic process. It requires energy input to break the bonds of the solid butter and convert it into a liquid state.
No, melting butter is an endothermic process, which means it absorbs energy from its surroundings to change from a solid to a liquid. This is why butter feels cold when it melts.
It is an endothermic process.
endothermic
This is an endothermic process (need energy for melting), a physical change..
Ice cream melting (or pretty much anything melting) is an endothermic process in that it requires the absorption of heat energy in order to occur. An example of an exothermic process is the burning of paper which gives off heat energy.
Melting butter is an endothermic change because it requires the input of energy to break the intermolecular forces holding the solid butter together. This energy is absorbed from the surroundings, resulting in a decrease in temperature around the butter as it melts.
Endothermic
Melting is an endothermic process.
Melting is endothermic. Freezing is exothermic.
The equation for the butter melting process is one pot plus butter plus heat. If the heat is microwave then the equation would be one container (no-metal) with cover plus butter plus heat.
False.The original answer (now deleted ) said that the melting of ice is an endothermic reaction.If you need to convince yourself of this, take half a glass of water at room temperature. Put in a thermometer, wait a while, then record the temperature.Now add a few ice cubes; wait a while, then check the temperature again. If the melting of ice were an exothermic process, the water would then be warmer. Since you will actually find the water to be cooler, it is an endothermic process.