They do not have the same set of physical properties. At the very least they have different melting and boiling points, and different densities, and their colors are not identical.
Chemical properties involve reacting with another substance. IE: burning of magnesium requires oxygen after which it is no longer magnesium. Physical properties do not. IE: metals are malleable, some very malleable, like copper wire can be bent with your hand. BUT it is still copper wire.
It is a physical change because only its shape changed, not its chemical composition.
Copper Sulfide is a wholly different chemical from copper and sulfur, and thus shows different characteristics and is not dividable by physical means, while a mixture of copper and sulfur powder is just a physical mix.
Yes, hammered copper is a physical change. When copper is hammered, its shape and size change, but its chemical composition remains the same.
This is a physical change.
Copper has both chemical and physical properties. Chemical properties refer to how copper reacts with other substances, while physical properties refer to characteristics like its color, density, and conductivity.
Copper is a chemical element, so it is considered a substance with distinct chemical properties, not a physical property. Its physical properties include being a solid at room temperature, having a distinct color and density, while its chemical properties include its ability to react with other substances and form different compounds.
No, copper wire is a physical property of copper. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances, while physical properties describe the characteristics of a substance without changing its chemical composition.
Copper is a chemical element with the symbol Cu and atomic number 29. It is a metal that exhibits both physical and chemical properties. Its physical properties would include its luster, malleability, and high thermal and electrical conductivity, while its chemical properties involve its ability to react with other substances to form compounds.
The property of copper being a good conductor of electricity is a physical property because it can be observed without changing the chemical composition of copper. It is a characteristic based on the arrangement of electrons in the copper atoms.
Chemical properties involve reacting with another substance. IE: burning of magnesium requires oxygen after which it is no longer magnesium. Physical properties do not. IE: metals are malleable, some very malleable, like copper wire can be bent with your hand. BUT it is still copper wire.
Color is a physical property. However, change in color is a sign of a chemical reaction.
Bending a copper wire is a physical change because the copper itself does not undergo a chemical reaction. The arrangement of copper atoms simply changes temporarily when the wire is bent, but the properties of copper remain the same.
If you meant to ask, "Is stretching copper into wire a physical or chemical change", it's a physical change.
The reaction between aluminum and copper chloride is a chemical change. During the reaction, a chemical reaction occurs resulting in the formation of new substances with different properties than the original reactants. This is different from a physical change where substances maintain their original properties.
No this will not make a chemical change because if you put copper in baking soda it will make a physical change because it is not changing any of the properties inside the copper.
No, drawing copper into wire is a physical change because the chemical composition of copper remains the same throughout the process. The transformation involves only a change in shape and size, not in the chemical properties of the copper atoms.