If you change something physically it may look, act or feel different, but it is still the same thing.
Not yet. Scientist are still debating whether it is or not.
Nope. That is a physical change. If I crush a cookie into powder, it is still cookie- no chemical change. The form and appearance have changed. But pour powdered cookie onto your tongue, and it is still cookie.
A mashed potato is still a potato. The only change is physically from a solid state into a mashed state. The chemical composition of the potato has not been changed.
Because at the melting point the chemical nature is not changed.
The state of matter you are referring to is called the liquid state. In liquids, particles have more freedom of movement compared to solids but are still close together, allowing them to flow and take the shape of the container they are in.
If you change something physically it may look, act or feel different, but it is still the same thing.
No. It is still the same matter, just in a different state.
he changed surname, don't know if he's still alive though
That is simple no matter how far you compress matter it will still be pores . If you take a molecule all the way down pass the quarks it will still have sub molecular spaces, so even using the concept of Chaos and fractals no matter how many levels somthing is broken down it will never (by definition) be solid.
Answer: When any substance goes through a phase change only its state is changed, it is still the same combination of element's.
It Doesnt Matter If He Is.... He Is Still Fit though :) x
it doesnt really matter at all, because even though its dirty it still has the original grip on it.
Plasma is probably the answer you're looking for, although it is still baryonic matter, but it is not like the usual matter found on Earth.
its still a solid at room temperature
No I can still buy mecuricome in Washington State. It no longer contains mercury though.
MAssachusetts, specifically Boston, though. It is still referred to as "Beantown"
Yes, because it only changed its physical state