Physical change. The paper is still a piece of paper; nothing happened to the chemical composition of it.
Physical change
chemical change
No. It is a physical change because there is no change in the chemical composition of the paper. If you were to burn the paper, that would be a chemical change called combustion, which would turn the paper into carbon dioxide and water, with the release of heat.
Stretching a piece of plastic until it breaks is a physical change because the bonds between the plastic molecules are being rearranged and broken without changing the chemical composition of the plastic itself.
physical, you are only changing its appearance! :P
Cutting a piece of copper in half is a physical change because it only alters the physical appearance of the copper without changing its chemical composition.
Cutting paper is a physical change because, it involves changing something without changing its chemical structure
Physical change. The paper is still a piece of paper; nothing happened to the chemical composition of it.
In a physical change, the substance is still the same substance after the change. But in a chemical change, the substance became another substance with different properties from the original substance.Physical change is changing the appearance of something. Example - Rip a piece of paper - physical change. Burn gasoline - chemical change.
Physical change
chemical change
its a physical change it may look different but it is still in the same state as a solid piece of gold
Physical. It's still aluminum foil.
No. It is a physical change because there is no change in the chemical composition of the paper. If you were to burn the paper, that would be a chemical change called combustion, which would turn the paper into carbon dioxide and water, with the release of heat.
Burning is a chemical change.
Chemical.