Chewing a bite of hamburger is a physical change. It involves breaking down the food into smaller pieces through mechanical action, but the basic chemical composition of the hamburger remains the same.
Chewing food is not a chemical change, it is Physical. all you are doing is crushing down the food inside your mouth, not changing the actual substance.
it is a chemical change
Crushing charcoal into powder is a physical change, as it alters the size and shape of the charcoal without changing its chemical composition.
Chemical broooooooooooooooo niga
no chewing gum is a physical change, because the gum itself does not change.
Chewing a bite of hamburger is a physical change. It involves breaking down the food into smaller pieces through mechanical action, but the basic chemical composition of the hamburger remains the same.
Yes.
Chewing food is not a chemical change, it is Physical. all you are doing is crushing down the food inside your mouth, not changing the actual substance.
Chewing breaks down food into smaller pieces (a physical change). Enzymes break down the food into its different components (a chemical change).
It has both chemical and physical components Chewing, of course, is a physical process. Additionally enzymes in the saliva and stomach break down food chemically.
Eating an apple is both chemical and physical. By biting and chewing the apple you are causing a physical change in the apples general structure- nothing chemical. But when you swallow the apple and your stomach acid breaks down the apple and absorbs nutrients you are exerting a chemical change.
No, melting ice is a chemical change where as carving ice is physical.... Another example is chewing food is physical where as enzymes in your saliva breaking down the food is chemical.
Digesting french fries is both a physical and a chemical change. The chewing, pressing, and manipulating of the french fry is physical. The enzymes, bacterias, and acids breaking them down would be chemical.
Chewing of food is considered a physical change, not a chemical change. Chewing merely breaks down food into smaller pieces, while the chemical composition of the food remains the same. Once the food is digested in the stomach and broken down by enzymes, chemical changes occur.
Digesting french fries is both a physical and a chemical change. The chewing, pressing, and manipulating of the french fry is physical. The enzymes, bacterias, and acids breaking them down would be chemical.
Yes it is a phisycal change because even though you cut the carrot in half its still a carrot. You're not changing the substence you are just changing what it looks like no cutting carrotis not a physical change no cutting carrotis not a physical change