Science, asked by akshatson123, 7 months ago

what is law of conservation of mass​

Answers

Answered by aera31
1

Answer:

The Law of Conservation of Mass dates from Antoine Lavoisier's 1789 discovery that mass is neither created nor destroyed in chemical reactions. ... If we account for all reactants and products in a chemical reaction, the total mass will be the same at any point in time in any closed system.

Explanation:

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Answered by ForbiddenFruit
1

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  \huge\colorbox{violet}{~✟~JESUS~✟~}

\sf\pink{~꧁~} \sf\underline\green{Law~of~conservation~of~mass} \sf\pink{~꧂~}

\huge\bold\red{~⭐~} During a chemical change matter is neither created nor destroyed. But it undergoes physical and chemical changes. \huge\bold\red{~⭐~}

This is known as the

\rm\red{law~of~conservation~of~mass}

Ex :- \blue{Zn~+~} \blue{CuSO}_{4} \orange{~⇨~} \blue{ZnSO}_{4} \blue{~+~Cu}

  \huge\colorbox{violet}{~✟~JESUS~✟~}

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