Does the water ever change into anything except water? No, so it's not a chemical change.
A physical change
Puddles drying up in the sun are examples of evaporation, where liquid water is converted into water vapor due to exposure to heat and sunlight. This process is a natural part of the water cycle in which water evaporates from the Earth's surface into the atmosphere.
Answer: It is a chemical change, it changes the actual composition of the object by removing water.
Freeze-drying is a chemical change because it changes the actual composition of the object by removing water.
It is a chemical change. Fermentation causes bonds to break within a compound and new bonds form thus chemically changing the initial 'reactant'.
The drying itself is (always) a physical change.
Drying (involving only the water evaporation) is a physical change.
A physical change
Physical, it is still H2O
Yes.
Physical change. The water on the road evaporates, which is a physical change.
No, drying of fish is a physical change, not a chemical change. The process of drying simply involves the removal of water from the fish, causing it to undergo a physical transformation, but its chemical composition remains the same.
yes
Puddles drying up in the sun are examples of evaporation, where liquid water is converted into water vapor due to exposure to heat and sunlight. This process is a natural part of the water cycle in which water evaporates from the Earth's surface into the atmosphere.
Gasoline evaporation is a physical process.
Ink drying is a physical change because it involves the evaporation of the solvent, leaving the pigment behind on the surface of the paper. Some examples of ink drying include ballpoint pens, markers, and printing ink drying on paper.
It is a Physical Change because i dont know but im sure that is a physical change :P