Yes, taste is an intensive property because it does not depend on the amount of the substance being tasted. The taste of a small sample of a substance will be the same as the taste of a larger sample of the same substance.
Yes, the tart taste of an antacid tablet is a chemical property. It is determined by the specific chemical compounds present in the tablet that interact with taste receptors on the tongue to produce the tart sensation.
The state of matter is a physical property at any temperature.
Food doesn't "affect" taste, taste is a property of food.
Density and state of matter are physical properties, its not chemical =p.
Taste is considered a physical property of matter because it is a characteristic that can be experienced through the interaction of the taste buds on our tongue with molecules in food. Taste is related to the chemical composition of a substance and how it stimulates our taste receptors. Different substances have different tastes based on their physical and chemical properties.
Taste is a sense, a faculty of a living organism, which uses enzymes to predict chemical composition. However, chemicals may be described by their taste as discerned by a human being, or by some other organism.
one property of acids is that they taste sour.
Taste is not a property of loyalty.
A Matter of Taste was created on 2011-06-13.
It can be a property of matter or a substance
A corn is not a property of matter.
Matter of taste. Everyone is beautiful, just in their own special way(:
I consider taste as a chemical property.
no
Yes, mass is a property of matter.
A physical change, of course. A physical change includes change in shape, color, or texture.