Physical change
No, sunburn is a physical change rather than a chemical change. It involves damage to the skin from overexposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun, rather than a change in the chemical composition of the skin.
a physical reaction for the chemical structure is not changing.
A sunburn is typically a first degree burn, but since it is a chemistry assignment and not biology, its likely refering to a chemical change or physical manefestations of a chemical reaction (the skin turns red because it was burnt.)
In a chemical reaction something new is created. A chemical change is inreversible where as a physical change is. In a physical change nothing new is formed.
A sunburn is considered a chemical change because it involves damage to the skin cells caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, rather than just a physical change like a change in color or texture. The UV radiation triggers biochemical reactions that lead to inflammation and skin cell damage.
Water is not a reaction at all. If you mean to ask if a state change in water is chemical or physical, it is physical.
A physical change is one in which the chemical composition of the substance does not change. A chemical change is one in which new products are formed with their own unique chemical compositions and properties.
Both. A chemical reaction occurs & a physical change is noticeable.
This is a chemical reaction, a chemical change.
Chemical change
no its a chemical reaction
A physical reaction is when no new substances are formed, there is a change of state eg ice melting to a liquid. A chemical change is when the reaction forms a new substance. eg gas bubbles. An acid reaction can be both. You need to look at the reaction taking place, look for change of state (physical) or any colour change or gas bubbles (chemical).