In order to satisfy the law of conservation of matter/mass, which states that in a chemical reaction matter can neither be created nor destroyed.
Equal quantities may be added to both sides of a linear equation.
The numbers of atoms of each elemental type, as represented by their element symbols, will always be the same on both sides of a balanced chemical equation.
Yes, the point is that if two terms (or sides of the equation) are equal, then they remain equal as long as you add or subtract the same amount, to or from both of them. It's very logical.
That is called an equation. An equation has an equal sign (=), and expressions on both sides of the equal sign.
Equal quantities.
we should balance a chemical equation so that both the sides of the elements and compounds are equal.
Due to the law of conservation of mass and matter, all particles must have an equal number on both sides of a chemical equation. An equal number of atoms of each element involved must be on each side of the equation.
I think its a property in which both sides of an equation are equal either by adding, subtracting, multiplication, or division.
Equal quantities may be added to both sides of a linear equation.
Coefficents don't have to be equal, it's just that that the number of each element or ion has to be the same on both sides
A balanced chemical equation has the same number of atoms of each element on both sides. The mass of the reactants is equal to the mass of products.
blananced equation
Placing coefficients in front of compounds or elements or poly-atomic ions to balance the number of atoms of different elements between the reactants side and the products side. Ex. CH4 + 2 O2 CO2 + 2 H2O
the equation is unbalanced becoz the mass is not the same on both sides of equation such a chemical equation is a skeletal chemical equation for a reaction
If both sides are equal, it's called an equation. If both sides are NOT equal, it's called an inequality.
It should be 2Mg+O2 = 2MgO, that is an equation (both sides equal).
Balanced