yes
A clear mixture is a homogeneous mixture where the components are evenly distributed and the mixture appears transparent or see-through. This often occurs when substances are dissolved in a solvent to form a solution, such as sugar dissolved in water.
Such a gas-gas mixture is, technically, a solution but most people do not use that term to describe it.
Not necessarily. A mixture can be anything that contains 2 or more substances, like sand and sugar or water and olive oil. In a solution one of the substances has been dissolved in the other, that is to say, one of them has been split up in parts too small to see with the naked eye. Styrofoam in gasoline is a solution. Sugar in water is also a solution and so is tea in water. The tea-leaves however have not dissolved and are not part of the solution.The easiest way to tell if something is a solution is to see if it is transparent (you could see though it, even if it's colored) or opaque.Yes, a solution is always a mixture, but a mixture is not always a solution.
A mixture.
It is true because the solution is clean and transparent. It is not possible to separate the constituents by physical means.
Regarding the composition of ocean water, I would describe it as a homogeneous mixture, or solution.
A solution is an example of a mixture in which the particles cannot be seen individually. The solute particles are evenly distributed and dispersed throughout the solvent, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
A solution is a clear mixture in which a substance dissolves in water.
Birdseed is a mixture not a solution.
mixture or solution
solution is transparent whereas suspension is not transparent. particles in solution are of size less than 100nm.but particles of suspension are of size more than 1000nm.solution is homogeneous mixture whereas suspension is heterogeneous mixture. solution doesn't exhibit Tyndall effect or brownian movement.but suspension exhibits it....
A solution is a homogeneous mixture made up of a solute and a solvent. You can tell if a substance is a solution by looking for a uniform composition throughout, where the solute dissolves completely in the solvent. Solutions are typically transparent and do not separate upon standing.