No. a mineral is a compound of fixed chemical composition and of fixed crystal structure.
I don't think so.
Yes, I do believe that it does. If it is salt water then the damage will be greater due to corosion. Good luck if it's you iPod that you are asking about.
Because the proportions between the water and the salt in a solution are not fixed but variable. (Some salts, however, do form compounds called "hydrates" with water. An example is CuSO4 . 5 H2O.)
No, a salt solution is not a pure substance. It is a mixture of salt (solute) dissolved in water (solvent). A pure substance contains only one type of element or compound with a fixed chemical composition.
An element is a substance that consists of the same type of atom. For example, oxygen(O2) is an element since it contains only oxygen atoms.It is also not a compound as compounds consist of two or more elements which have been chemically bonded in a fixed ratio.Salt water is not an element, it is a mixture of two compounds i.e. salt (NaCl) and water (H2O) aalso, the ratio of salt to water can vary in the mixture it doe snot always occur in a fixed proportion.
Salt water is a mixture because it is composed of two or more substances that are physically combined but can be separated by physical means, such as evaporation. The salt (sodium chloride) and water in salt water do not chemically combine to form a new substance; they retain their individual properties.
opening a pool is different then closing a pool because opening the pool is when the pool is all filled up with water an fixed an has chlorine in it and closing the pool is if u don't have no chlorine in it and it is not fixed or don't have no water in it
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
Salt water
Salt water is denser than fresh (not salt) water.
The amount of salt water you get will depend on the concentration of salt in the water. When you mix salt with water, the salt dissolves into the water to increase its volume slightly. The overall volume of the salt water will be the sum of the volumes of the original salt and water components.