pyrophoric
The combustion of magnesium in air is a chemical reaction.
When hydrogen burns in air with H2+O2= H20
It is oxidation as the wood combines with air.
"Hydro" does not mean water in Greek; it actually means "water" in English. The element you are referring to that turns into water when it burns in air is hydrogen (not hydro), with the chemical symbol H. When hydrogen gas reacts with oxygen in the air, it forms water (H2O) through a chemical reaction.
The magnesium burns readily in air to produce a white ash which is magnesium oxide. This is due to the "oxidation" of the metal.
Chemical
Water.
The combustion of magnesium in air is a chemical reaction.
combustion
When magnesium burns in air, it undergoes a chemical change called combustion. During combustion, magnesium reacts with oxygen in the air to form magnesium oxide. This reaction releases a significant amount of energy in the form of heat and light.
Yes. Magnesium burns in air brightly giving Magnesium oxide, witch is a chemical change.
oxide.
When hydrogen burns in air with H2+O2= H20
Magnesium oxide anything that is burned with oxygen (what is left) is called [material you burned] oxide
The chemical property described is called flammability.
When hydrogen burns in air, it forms water (H2O). This is a chemical reaction in which hydrogen gas (H2) reacts with oxygen gas (O2) to produce water vapor.
Something that burns or is flammable would be a chemical change.