Yes, an atom can break or split. This is the concept behind the atom bomb.
Heat can sometimes break the chemical bonds of atoms.
The magnetism of a permanent magnet is caused by the magnetic alignement of individual atoms in the crystal structure of the ferromagnetic material. You can break a magnet into thousands of pieces and each tiny piece is a magnet with north and south poles. Each piece will attract or repel any of the other pieces depending on how they are oriented to one another.
They are called electrons.
"Break into pieces" means to shatter or fragment something into smaller parts or components, usually as a result of force or pressure being applied.
when atoms break their old links and form new links with other atoms it is called chemical reaction
Yes you can but only scientists know how to make it. It's called an atom bomb. It splits atoms.
Salt is a molecule itself if you break it into pieces you get the atoms Sodium and chlorine I hoped this helped :)
C. Hardness. Galena has a low hardness level, which causes it to break into tiny pieces rather than deform.
This is FALSE ! Because you only broke it in pieces and tearing or breaking into pieces is a PHYSICAL CHANGE not a chemical change. ---------------------------- I also consider that breaking graphite is only a physical change. - - - - --------------------- It's true, you break chemical bonds when you break pieces of graphite. Graphite is a macromolecule: it is found in sheets, and within the sheets each carbon atom is bonded to four other carbon atoms. The only way you could possibly get it apart is to break the bonds between atoms.
Break It to Pieces was created in 2004.
No. Atoms never, ever break in chemical reactions. Molecules break if you want to see atoms break, look up nuclear reactions
Heat can sometimes break the chemical bonds of atoms.
All of them. Molecules are made of atoms, not pieces of atoms.
no
Break into small pieces is the definition of grate, and huge is the definition of great
Atoms
ATOMS