it is the same as the law of conservation of mass
The law that states mass cannot be created or destroyed in chemical or physical changes is the Law of Conservation of Mass, also known as the Principle of Mass Conservation. This law implies that in a closed system, the total mass remains constant before and after any chemical or physical process, even if the substances undergo a change in form or state.
In nuclear changes.
The total mass of a sample of water remains constant when it condenses from a liquid to a gas, according to the law of conservation of mass. Although the water changes state, transitioning from liquid to gas involves energy changes rather than mass loss. Therefore, the mass before and after the phase change is the same.
Mass is not created or destroyed during chemical or physical changes.
Antoine Lavoisier's findings and studies on chemical reactions led to the formulation of the law of conservation of mass. He demonstrated that in a chemical reaction, the total mass of the reactants is equal to the total mass of the products, showing that matter is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction. Lavoisier's work laid the foundation for modern chemistry and our understanding of the conservation of mass.
All changes, other than some nuclear reactions, must obey the Law of Conservation of Mass. Chemical reactions, physical changes, heating, cooling, and phase changes must obey the Law of Conservation of Mass.
Conservation of mass
The mass of reactants is equal to the mass of products.
The Law of Conservation of Mass is the concept that mass cannot be created or destroyed, it simply changes form.
The conservation of matter principle states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. In the context of phase changes, the total mass of a substance remains the same before and after a phase change occurs. This means that during a phase change, while the substance may change its physical state (solid to liquid, liquid to gas, etc.), the total amount of matter stays constant.
The law that states mass cannot be created or destroyed in chemical or physical changes is the Law of Conservation of Mass, also known as the Principle of Mass Conservation. This law implies that in a closed system, the total mass remains constant before and after any chemical or physical process, even if the substances undergo a change in form or state.
In nuclear changes.
Mass is not created or destroyed in chemical or physical changes.
what happens is the mass stays the same because of the law of conservation of mass
the of conservation of energy states that energy neither is created or destroyed it changes states the of conservation of mass states that mass neither is created or destroyed it only changes state
The total mass of a sample of water remains constant when it condenses from a liquid to a gas, according to the law of conservation of mass. Although the water changes state, transitioning from liquid to gas involves energy changes rather than mass loss. Therefore, the mass before and after the phase change is the same.
Mass is not created or destroyed during chemical or physical changes.