No, there are millions of different possibilities. First of all, there are two types of mixtures, heterogeneous and homogeneous. In heterogeneous mixtures you can observe the different components that make them up. Concrete, jello with fruit salad, sand and iron filings, are examples of heterogeneous mixtures. Sugar water, salt water, Kool-Aid, coffee, tea, copper sulfate solution, Benedict's solution, are examples of homogeneous mixtures and are called solutions. In addition to different examples of mixtures, they can all have different concentrations of their different components.
Sometimes. A mixture can be a heterogenous (different throughout) mixture, or a homogenous (same throughout) mixture.
No. There are homogeneous mixtures which are the same throughout, like salt water; and there are heterogeneous mixtures that are not the same throughout, like granite.
No. The atoms must be different to be a described as a mixture (you have "mixed" two separate substances together).
The answer is a Homogeneous mixture
This is a homogeneous mixture.
The term solution can be used to identify a mixture that has the same composition throughout.
This is a homogeneous mixture.
The term gas can not be used to identify a mixture that has the same composition throughout. Gas is a state of matter.
If I remember correctly, a mixture with the same composition throughout is a homogeneous mixture~
The answer is a Homogeneous mixture
The answer is a Homogeneous mixture
The answer is a Homogeneous mixture
This is a homogeneous mixture.
A homogeneous mixture is uniform (the same) throughout.
The term solution can be used to identify a mixture that has the same composition throughout.
YES! Sand is a mixture. Sand is classified as a heterogeneous mixture because it does not have the same properties, composition, and appearance throughout the mixture. A homogeneous mixture has a uniform mix throughout.
This is a homogeneous mixture.
Homogeneous mixture.
This is a homogeneous mixture; an exmaple is vinegar.
solution