That is not strictly correct. The straw has undergone physical change: it is wet!
No, breaking glass is considered to be an irreversible change because the glass is physically broken into smaller pieces, which cannot be easily reassembled to its original form.
The comparison can be made in terms of their fragility, as both control and question glass may be delicate or easily breakable. Glass that cannot be pieced together implies a level of fragility similar to the control and question glass.
Glass is an insulator because it does not conduct electricity. It is a poor conductor of heat as well. Glass's insulating properties make it useful for applications where electrical or thermal insulation is needed.
No. Glass bottles will undergo physical changes in the environment such as breaking or sharp edges smoothing out (think seaglass), but the natural processes of chemical decomposition doesn't work on glass. The same goes for styrofoam.
When a glass rod is rubbed with fur, the glass rod becomes positively charged and the fur becomes negatively charged. This is due to the transfer of electrons from the fur to the glass rod, creating a static electricity charge imbalance between the two materials.
Not really. A broken glass is still glass; no chemical change has occurred. But it is physically different, so it is better to say a physical change happened.
Nothing happens to it. The speed of light is constant as long as it stays in the oil, and although it changes as it crosses the boundary from one to the other, it stays constant again once it's in the glass.
It meant nothing.
Nothing happens to it. The speed of light is constant as long as it stays in the oil, and although it changes as it crosses the boundary from one to the other, it stays constant again once it's in the glass.
Glass Rose happened in 2003.
It is not possible to physically get a drinking glass out of another drinking glass as they are solid objects. You would need to pour the contents of one glass into another or use a tool to remove it.
ya cant put glass in em and ya cant use it when theres nothing inside. that just happened to us. someone left it on while theres nothing in it and the glass plate busted
you do nothing with it
it cant physically catch fire but it can cause an explosion.
Nothing, glass is an insulator.
No, breaking glass is considered to be an irreversible change because the glass is physically broken into smaller pieces, which cannot be easily reassembled to its original form.
It varies - so long as the glass is physically capable of holding twice as much liquor as a single-shot glass, the dimensions can be almost anything.