Yes because the water changed its state of matter, but not its actual chemical make up. State of Matter changing is almost always physical change
when the temperature around the ice gets warmer, it melts it. When you put ice in water, the water is actually warmer than ice (hence the ice to cool it off) and the ice naturally melts because it is submerged in the lower temperature.
Correct, any phase change is considered to be a physical change.
A physical change only. Its still ice. Even if it melts to water, its still a physical change.Crushing something would result in a physical change.
The process of dry ice sublimating, or turning directly from a solid to a gas, is a physical change. No new substances are formed, just a change in the physical state of the dry ice from solid to gas.
Milk is normally a liquid(a suspension of cream droplets in water), by freezing it milk changes from a liquid to a solid. This is a physical change, the substance is still milk, however it is no longer a liquid, it has changed into a solid.
water turning into ice
heat
when the temperature around the ice gets warmer, it melts it. When you put ice in water, the water is actually warmer than ice (hence the ice to cool it off) and the ice naturally melts because it is submerged in the lower temperature.
Yes because the ice melts into water. Then, it can be reversed. You can freeze the water and make ice. I believe you can also crank up the heat and turn the water into water vapor and then turn it down turning the gas into a liquid which you can freeze. So yes. It's a physical change.
Correct, any phase change is considered to be a physical change.
A physical change in matter involves altering its appearance without changing its chemical composition. An example would be melting ice into water, where the water is still H2O molecules, just in a different physical state.
Water can exist in three physical states: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor). It can undergo physical changes such as freezing (turning into ice), melting (turning into water), evaporation (turning into water vapor), condensation (turning back into liquid), and sublimation (directly turning from solid to gas).
i dont know i really dont konw yes i can water turning into ice
well when water changes into ice its a form of physical change
water to ice
A physical change only. Its still ice. Even if it melts to water, its still a physical change.Crushing something would result in a physical change.
the water freezing is physical change