Anything that is not a nuclear reaction, basically. So water freezing, chemical reactions, salt dissolving, etc
Law of conservation of mass states that If one or more substance undergo a reaction, then the mass of reactants and the products remains same. Example:- CaO + CO2 ------------> CaCO3 Here mass of CaO is 56 amu and mass of CO2 is 44 amu, and mass of CaCO3 is 100 amu . This shows that, mass of reactants= mass of products 56 + 44= 100
The law of Conservation of Mass was invented by a French chemist Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier.
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Antoine Lavoisier: Developed the Law of Conservation of Mass. We don't really know who discovered it. Hope that answered it...:)
conservation
For example the law of mass conservation.
the earth
matter can not be created or distroyed
An example of conservation of mass is simply cutting up a cookie into pieces. Even though you now have more pieces, it still has the same amount of mass (how much matter is made of the cookie) as you did when it was all in one piece. :)
This is an example of the law of conservation of mass. It states that the total mass of substances before a chemical reaction is the same as the total mass of substances after the reaction.
you can change a mass of something if you take part of the product out of it
Balancing a chemical equation is an example of the law of conservation of mass, which states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, only rearranged. Balancing ensures that the total number of each type of atom is the same on both sides of the equation.
Yes. This is an example of the law of conservation of matter/mass.
There are several laws of conservation; please clarify which one you mean. For example, there is the law of conservation of mass, of energy, of momentum, of rotational momentum, of electrical charge, and others.
The best example of the law of conservation of matter is complete combustion. If you were to burn something of known mass in a closed system, the system would have the same mass before and after combustion occurs.
When rocks change form in the rock cycle, we see an example of the conservation of mass. This principle states that the total mass of the rock remains constant throughout the cycle, even as it undergoes various processes such as weathering, erosion, and sedimentation.
The law of conservation of mass, which states that in a closed system, mass is neither created nor destroyed, it can only change form. This means that in a chemical reaction that takes place in a closed system, the mass of the reactants equals the mass of the products.