i think by distillation..we can get pure water and salt
it all depends on which crystals you mean, salt crystals can dissolve in both hot and cold water they dissolve quicker in hot water as the hot water acts as a catalyst for this
Seawater is a solution. To separate a solid from a solution, u can use crystallisation. Evaporation would cause impurities to form. Crystallisation can be done by heating the seawater till a saturated solution is formed. Crystals form on the glass rod when the solution is saturated. After the solution is heated till saturation, filter the crystals and dry them in peices of filter paper. The crystals obtained is sodium chloride (salt).
It depends on the solid and the liquid used. For instance, sand and water may look cloudy when stirred together, but the sand is not dissolved into the water, it is not a solution, and the sand grains will simply settles to the bottom. Taking salt and water, as an example. It is possible to dissolve salt crystals with water to form a clear (transparent) saline solution. To separate the salt from the water, you use heat to evaporate the water into a vapour (steam) leaving the salt crystals behind. If the water vapour is then condensed back into water, you are left with salt and water, both separated from each other.
Salted water is a mixture and a solution.
It can't because of the solid particles of the pepper. This mixture is called a suspension.
Water is a chemical compound.
Sugar crystals form from over saturated sugar in the mixture.
No, they both are not miscible and is a heterogeneous solution
Both. A solution is a mixture.
They are both light colored crystals that dissolve in water.
because they both are pagal
they both have to mix with water