Of course; burning is a chemical reaction, an oxidation.
This is a physical change.
No.
Burning is a chemical change.
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Burning is a chemical change.
No.
This is a physical change.
Yes, the burning of sugar is a chemical change, as it produces substances with different chemical properties than the reactants.
The process described involves a chemical change. Boiling is a physical change as it involves a substance changing state from liquid to gas. Rusting, fermenting, and burning are chemical changes as they involve rearrangement of atoms in the substances leading to new chemical properties.
All burning reactions involve chemical reactions (chemical changes).
Burning is a chemical change.
The process of burning in the presence of oxygen is that of a chemical change. It is a chemical change and not a physical change because the prodects do not have the same properties as the reactants.
Boiling does not involve a chemical change in property. Boiling is a physical change in which a substance changes from a liquid to a gas without changing its chemical composition. The other options (rusting, burning, fermenting) involve chemical reactions that result in changes to the chemical composition of the substances involved.
The chemical change is the burning wood because the products, carbon dioxide, water, ash, and soot, have different physical and chemical properties. The other changes are physical changes because the physical and chemical properties of the substances did not change.
Physical change is the change in which only physical properties changes ,like color, hardness, density etc. Chemical changes affect the composition as well as chemical properties of matter and result in formation of new substance. Examples of chemical changes are : Burning of coal Burning of Paper Electrolysis of water
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Burning is a chemical change.