yes, anytime you can successfully and completely combine two things together, that makes a solution
You have made sweet water. It is a mixture of sugar and water. It can be separated back into sugar and water by evaporating the water, since there is no chemical change. Add a teabag and make sweet tea.
yes because when you dissolve sugar into water, it doesn't dissapear. You may not be able to see it but the sugar is still in the water, therefore making it heavier because there are two masses there (sugar and water)
Firstly, water is to be added to make sugar water solution. The the total mixture of sand and sugar-water solution is passed through filter paper. The sand separates out and sugar water solution is collected in a vessel. Then by evaporating sugar is collected.
The soap dissolved in the water. you are welcome ;)
That you use the same amount of water and sugar each time.
No, water and sugar alone do not make an electrolyte solution. Electrolyte solutions contain salts such as sodium, potassium, and chloride that dissociate into ions in the water, conducting electricity. Sugar does not dissociate into ions and does not contribute to the electrolyte properties of a solution.
If you mean solution, then you can make a solution with water by just combining water and sugar. It's the same with sugar and other liquids, although sugar won't create a solution with all liquids.
sugar and water?
Yes, it does.
The sugar is a solute and the water is the solvent. Together they make a sugar solution.
Dissolving sugar in water is a spontaneous process as it increases the entropy (disorder) of the system. The increase in entropy overcomes the small decrease in enthalpy to make the overall process spontaneous.
To make a sugar solution more concentrated, you can heat the solution to evaporate some of the water content, thus increasing the ratio of sugar to water. Another way is to keep the solution in an open container to allow water to evaporate naturally, leaving behind a more concentrated sugar solution.