Science, asked by hewkosladys, 4 months ago

Which property of physical changes explains why matter is conserved in a physical change?

The arrangements of particles do not change, and the bonds between atoms do not break.
Mass, not energy, changes in a physical change.
Energy and mass change in a physical change.
The bonds between atoms do not break; it is only the arrangement that changes.

Answers

Answered by Aukatkbahar
5

Answer:

Hey mate Here is ur answer❤

Mass is always conserved in a chemical change, which process involves involves the rearrangement of atoms and molecules. Of course most physical changes also conserve mass: when 10⋅g of liquid water is frozen, you are left with 10⋅g of solid ice.

Answered by ajwimp10
0

Answer: (B) i got it right on edge

Explanation:

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