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Filtering is a process that removes particles from a liquid. Filtering also cannot add anything to a liquid. Seeing as muddy water is water with dirt in it, filtering is not a process that can make muddy water.
to make it clear for observation
No, I don't think the ocean water will ever be clear. There will always be sand and fish and dirt and animal waste and ALL sorts of things in the ocean.
in room temp it decompose .it make a clear soloution with diluted nitric acid
Yes. Too little will make it darker. If you drink too much, your body will remove more. If you drink too little, your body will hold on to more.
Backpackers use filters to clear drinking water. Big commercial water plants use a combination of settling ponds, filters, and aeration to make drinking water. Another way is to distill the water, though that requires a lot of energy.
A number of things can make well water look muddy. If you are consuming this water it is essential to have it biologically tested before using it further.A number of things can make well water look muddy. If you are consuming this water it is essential to have it biologically tested before using it further.
Words that mean "to make confused or less clear" include: Confuse Befuddle Obscure Obfuscate Muddy Disorient Befug
Filtering is a process that removes particles from a liquid. Filtering also cannot add anything to a liquid. Seeing as muddy water is water with dirt in it, filtering is not a process that can make muddy water.
Crystalisation
make the water muddy
not knowing sorry
the government purifies the muddy water by distilling it and desalinates the seawater to make it fit for drinking.
Earth and water mixed so as to be soft and adhesive., To bury in mud., To make muddy or turbid.
Water in the oil, make sure your cap is on good and make sure vacum is not pulling water from the intake man. IE coolant.
No. Drinking untreated lake water can make you sick no matter how clear.
Well, the last time I saw raindrops on glass, I did not notice that they were particularly muddy, so I may suggest that it is not mud but acid that your rain contains, and perhaps you confused the two. Yet once rain hits the ground, it may collect in puddles of rainwater. When disturbed, the rainwater is muddy. In this case, the answer is that the very small particles of soil have been stirred up by the energy put into the water, and they will be temporarily suspended, making the water muddy (as the water is now cloudy, and has the colour of the soil). If it is flowing freely down a slope, the water is muddy because as it trickles, it picks up tiny particles of soil, making it muddy. If this does not answer your question, try rephrasing it to make it more specific.