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1. an example of a physical property is ______ a. flammability b. abili…

Question

  1. an example of a physical property is ______

a. flammability
b. ability to rust
c. acidic
d. state of matter

  1. a ______ is a type of change in which the form of matter is changed but one substance is not transformed into another.
  1. physical changes are

a. reversible
b. irreversible
c. almost reversible
d. neither

  1. which of the following does not represent a physical change in matter?

a. crumpling a sheet of paper
b. melting (unclear text, likely a substance)
c. the evaporation of water
d. burning wood

  1. (true or false) physical changes do not change the chemical composition of a substance.
  1. what must be added or removed to matter in order for a phase change to occur?

Explanation:

Response
Question 1
Brief Explanations

Physical properties are characteristics of a substance that can be observed or measured without changing its chemical composition.

  • Option a (Flammability): This is a chemical property because it relates to how a substance reacts with oxygen to burn (a chemical change).
  • Option b (Ability to rust): Rusting is a chemical reaction (oxidation of iron), so this is a chemical property.
  • Option c (Acidity): Acidity involves chemical reactions (like how a substance donates protons), so it's a chemical property.
  • Option d (State of matter): The state of matter (solid, liquid, gas) of a substance can be observed without changing its chemical identity (e.g., water as liquid or ice as solid is still H₂O). So this is a physical property.
Brief Explanations

A physical change is a change in which the form or appearance of matter changes, but the chemical identity of the substance(s) remains the same (no new substance is formed). In a physical change, the atoms of matter are rearranged, but one substance does not transform into another (unlike chemical changes where new substances are formed). So the blank should be filled with "physical change".

Brief Explanations

Physical changes can often be reversed. For example, melting ice (physical change) can be reversed by freezing the water back into ice. Dissolving salt in water is a physical change and can be reversed by evaporating the water to get the salt back. While some physical changes might seem hard to reverse (like breaking a glass), many are reversible. Chemical changes are usually irreversible, but physical changes are mostly reversible.

  • Option a (Reversible): Correct, as many physical changes (like phase changes, dissolving) can be reversed.
  • Option b (Irreversible): Incorrect, this is more typical of chemical changes.
  • Option c (Mostly reversible): While "mostly" is true, the best answer here is "reversible" as the core idea is that physical changes are generally reversible (unlike chemical which are not).
  • Option d (Neither): Incorrect, since physical changes are reversible.

Answer:

d. State of matter

Question 2