yes lighting a match is a chemical change
yes
Lighting a match changes chemical energy into heat and light. The total amount of energy
Chemical potential energy being converted to heat energy
chemical
Chemical change.
chemical energy to light and heat energy
Lighting a match is a chemical change.
Mainly chemical (oxidation).
lighting a match from a matchbox is a chemical change.
This is a little tricky. Striking a match is a physical act, but it does induce chemical changes. It depends on exactly what you mean by "lighting", ultimately. The end result is definitely a chemical change.
The sulfur on the match catches fire from friction as it is struck on the matchbox.
Is the lighting of a bulb a reversible or an irreversible change
Lighting a match starts a chain reaction which boosts the materials of the match tip, the wood with oxygen. These process changes the substance chemical formula, thus chemical change happens.
Because when the light is matched, it has a chemical reaction that makes unable to change back into it's original format.
Lighting A Match
The answer is lighting a match box because when doing so, the match goes into flames and flammability is a chemical change. When cutting a snowflake, the substances do not change, neither does it change when drying wet clothes. The person earlier said drying wet clothes, but he/she is wrong because when you dry wet clothes, the water goes through a physical change called evaporation, which is NOT a chemical change. I hope this helps. Good luck on your chapter assessments(I'm doing mine too). :)
lighting is a chemical change
it is a chemical change because there is gas that gets released and you cant get it back. !