- iron rusting (iron oxide forms)
- gasoline burning (water vapor and carbon dioxide form)
- eggs cooking (fluid protein molecules uncoil and crosslink to form a network)
- bread rising (yeast converts carbohydrates into carbon dioxide gas)
- milk souring (sour-tasting lactic acid is produced)
- suntanning (vitamin D and melanin is produced)
Physical change rearranges molecules but doesn't affect their internal structures. Some examples of physical change are:
- whipping egg whites (air is forced into the fluid, but no new substance is produced)
- magnetizing a compass needle (there is realignment of groups ("domains") of iron atoms, but no real change within the iron atoms themselves).
- boiling water (water molecules are forced away from each other when the liquid changes to vapor, but the molecules are still H2O.)
- dissolving sugar in water (sugar molecules are dispersed within the water, but the individual sugar molecules are unchanged.)
- dicing potatoes (cutting usually separates molecules without changing them.)
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