Chemical Change occurs when one or more recognized substances cease to be recognizable and one or more "new" substances is now newly recognized. "Old and new" being distinguishable characteristic properties. Chemical change can be reversed; however, the reverse must also be chemical.
Chemical changes are those that can be undone with "difficulty", whereas a physical change can be undone comparatively easy. For instance, if you tear a piece of paper in two, you can tape it back together. If, however, you burn the piece of paper, there is no way to get the paper back from the ash. except through photosynthesis -- it has undergone a chemical change, one which cannot be undone very easily.
More examples:
Physical:
A balloon contracts when it is cooled
A pond freezes over
Gold is shaped into jewelry
Salt dissolves in water
A paper shredder rips paper
Chemical:
Food digests
Silver tarnishes
Vinegar reacts with baking soda to produce CO2
Wood burns
An apple browns
A copper church steeple turns green
A candle burns
For example melting, boiling, evaporation, transformation in powder are not signs of a chemical reaction.
Burning is a chemical change.
It's a chemical change
its a chemical change
Burning is a chemical change.
For example melting, boiling, evaporation, transformation in powder are not signs of a chemical reaction.
Burning is a chemical change.
It's a chemical change
its a chemical change
It is a chemical change.
Its a chemical change.
Burning is a chemical change.
Yes it is a chemical change because color change is an observed change that a chemical change has occurred. So you are very much right. :)
Chemical property
chemical
chemical
chemical change