Chemistry, asked by Jahnvisingh11, 7 months ago

Answer the following question.​

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Answered by dorgan399
7

Explanation:

According to conservation of mass

Atoms are not created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, they are just rearranged from the reactants to form the products.

Mass cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction. The law of conservation of mass states that the total mass of substances taking part in a chemical reaction is conserved during the reaction.

No atoms are added or taken away from the system, so the mass stays the same. Even in a chemical reaction when atoms interact and create new products, mass is conserved. This is because the new substances created are composed of atoms that were present in the reactants.

Answered by bhattak9617
2

The law of conservation matter states that matter is never created nor destroyed. Hence, total matter i.e. total mass of the substance rain unchanged during chemical change.

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