Much better. Ok, the answer is yes, matter can change shape and form. A good example is water. A liquid at room temperatue, when heated it becomes a gas, when cooled it becomes a solid.Ask yourself: What did my body look like a year before I was born?
Learning-http://www.answers.com/topic/knowledgeBehavioral modification especially through experience or conditioning.
No, changes in the rock cycle do not create or destroy matter; they simply redistribute and transform existing matter. Rocks are broken down into sediment, which is then compacted and cemented to form new rocks through processes like erosion, deposition, and lithification.
No, changes in state of matter (such as melting, freezing, boiling) are physical changes, not chemical changes. Chemical changes involve the formation of new substances with different chemical properties.
I think its a new substances is made so it changes the matter with it.
Matter can undergo physical changes, such as changing state from solid to liquid, or chemical changes where new substances are formed. These changes alter the properties of the matter but do not change the fundamental makeup of the atoms and molecules involved.
chemical change
Chemical change. 99.9% sure.
The science of what matter is made of and how it changes is called chemistry. Chemistry studies the composition, structure, properties, and reactions of matter. It provides insights into the behavior of atoms and molecules, and how they interact to form new substances.
it changes by the substances or chemicals combining and creating a new kind of matter (i.e. when rain and metal combined it creates rust and it is somewhat a solid). hope this helped :D
Nuclear physicists have theorized that it is possible to transform matter into energy and energy into matter.
chemical change, dude!
Learning-http://www.answers.com/topic/knowledgeBehavioral modification especially through experience or conditioning.
they had a new general and creates an ambush
No, changes in the rock cycle do not create or destroy matter; they simply redistribute and transform existing matter. Rocks are broken down into sediment, which is then compacted and cemented to form new rocks through processes like erosion, deposition, and lithification.
it just creates a new substance!
No, changes in state of matter (such as melting, freezing, boiling) are physical changes, not chemical changes. Chemical changes involve the formation of new substances with different chemical properties.
A physical change. This type of change involves a transformation in the appearance or form of a substance without altering its chemical composition. Examples include changes in state (solid to liquid) or dissolving a substance in water.