Crushing an aspirin is a physical change because the small pieces are still chemically the same as the aspirin tablet.
Crushing is a physical change.
Crushing creates a physical change in the size of the pieces but it does not change their chemical make up.
Pulverizing an aspirin tablet is a physical change (it is not a property at all). The chemical nature of the aspirin does not change when it is pulverized.
Physical change because the chemical state of the aspirin does not change, it is just crushed.
It is a physical change
Yes. Physical change is when you change the appearance but not the actual object. Crushing an aluminum can is a physical change because you have only changed its shape, but not its chemical composition.
Crushing is a physical process.
Physical
Chemical I think
physical, because the chemical composition of the aspirin stays the same. only it's physical state changes from a solid pill to a powder.
Crushing creates a physical change in the size of the pieces but it does not change their chemical make up.
Crushing an aluminum can is a physical change because you have only changed its shape, but not its chemical composition.
Pulverizing an aspirin tablet is a physical change (it is not a property at all). The chemical nature of the aspirin does not change when it is pulverized.
physical
No. Crushing is a physical change.
No, crushing sodium carbonate does not produce a new chemical substance. Thus, crushing is an example of a physical change.
Physical change because the chemical state of the aspirin does not change, it is just crushed.
Crushing a piece of chalk is only a physical change. Chemically, it is still chalk.