History, asked by lyricpurvis, 7 months ago

When baking soda and vinegar react, the surface bubbles. What does this most likely indicate? a chemical change, because a precipitate is being formed a chemical change, because a gas is being formed a non-chemical change, because a precipitate is being formed a non-chemical change, because a gas is being formed

Answers

Answered by laylamansell
6

Answer:

B) a chemical change, because a gas is being formed.

Explanation:

Just did it on edu

Answered by dipanjaltaw35
1

Answer:

A chemical change happens when two common home goods, baking soda and vinegar, are combined. The bubbles you observe are molecules of carbon dioxide gas being created throughout the process. Carbon dioxide does not exist at first; it arises as a result of chemical reactions in baking soda and vinegar.

Explanation:

Chemistry is the scientific study of matter's characteristics and behaviour. It is a natural science that studies the components that make up matter, as well as the compounds formed of atoms, molecules, and ions: their composition, structure, qualities, behaviour, and the changes that occur when they mix with other things. Chemistry is also concerned with the structure of chemical bonding in chemical substances.

Chemistry is in between physics and biology in terms of topic matter. It is frequently referred to as the primary science since it provides a fundamental basis for comprehending both basic and applied scientific fields.

For more similar questions refer to-

https://brainly.in/question/23638964

https://brainly.in/question/23670344

#SPJ3

Similar questions