Physics, asked by cumarabdul, 4 months ago

does change of state conserve mass? illustrate your answer

Answers

Answered by seemaguptavns75
7

Conservation of mass

The number of particles does not change during a change of state, only their spacing and arrangement. As a result, the total mass has not changed. It does not matter if a substance melts, freezes, boils, evaporates, condenses or sublimates - the mass does not change.

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Answered by AadilPradhan
1

Change of state conserves mass-

  • The term "matter" is defined as everything it takes up space and weighs something. Atoms, Molecules, basic particles, and any material made up of these particles are all included.
  • Physical and chemical changes can modify the shape of matter, yet all of these changes conserve matter. Prior to and following the transfer, the same quantity of matter exists—nothing is generated or destroyed. The Law of Mass Conservastion is the name given to this notion.
  • Chemical reactions and physical transformations do neither produce nor remove an isolated system's mass, as per the rule of mass of conserved.
  • To find masses that are unknown, such as how much gas is consumed or formed during a process, the rule of conserved of mass can be employed.
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