No and yes:
No: 'substance' is a word like 'matter', so the amount or type of substance is a physical property. When comparing an object with another 'more substantial' object, the 'more substantial' object is more massive or somehow stronger, so mass or strength would be the physical property considered.
Yes: Since substance is matter, something with substance has the property of being composed of some kind of matter (an atom) rather than being something else like purely energy (a photon) ... or perhaps thought (an idea).
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.
Physical properties are characteristics of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing the substance's identity, such as color, density, or boiling point. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances, such as flammability, reactivity, or toxicity.
Plasticity is a physical property, as it relates to the ability of a material to deform under stress without breaking. It is not a chemical property that involves changes in the chemical composition of a substance.
It is a chemical property of matter. When a substance decomposes on exposure to ultraviolet light, it undergoes a chemical change in its molecular structure, leading to the breakdown of its components into different substances.
Mixing with water is a physical change because the chemical composition of the substances remains the same before and after mixing. Physical properties refer to characteristics that can be observed or measured without changing the composition of the substance.
Flammability is a physical chemical property of materials.Flammability is a chemical property.
The chemical property of a substance detected by the sense of smell is its volatility, which determines how easily molecules of the substance can become airborne and reach olfactory receptors in the nose. Substances with higher volatility are more likely to produce a detectable scent.
Chemical property
Chemical, as new substances are formed
No, a reaction with many substances is not a physical property of water. Physical properties of water include its boiling point, density, and color, whereas the ability to undergo reactions with different substances is a chemical property.
The ability to react with other substances is a chemical property.
Reactivity is not a physical property, but rather a chemical property. It refers to how readily a substance undergoes chemical reactions with other substances.
Colorless gas is a physical property rather than a chemical property. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances to form new substances. Physical properties, such as color, do not involve changes in the chemical composition of the substance.
Miscibility is the property of substances to intermix in all proportions, forming a homogeneous solution of those substances. As no chemical reactions between those substances happen as they go into solution with each other, miscibility must be a physical property.
Yes, melting point is a physical property, not a chemical property. It is a characteristic of a substance that can help identify and differentiate it from other substances based on how it changes states from solid to liquid.
Zinc is not a property; it is a substance. Like all substances it has its own set of physical and chemical properties.
Neither. A tree is a living organism, not a property. A tree is composed of millions of chemical substances, each with its own chemical and physical properties.