A photograph is taken/created over a period of time. The brighter the light, the faster you can make a photo. The quality of glass the lenses are created from also plays a part; the better the glass the faster light can move through it, thus the faster an image can me made. And finally, how fast the sensor or film accepts light can play a big part in how quickly an image is made. (Note: the speed of a digital sensor or film is referred to as ISO.) So, bright lights, high quality glass, and a fast sensor/film will freeze anything that moves, including liquid as it splashes.
In some cases they will use 'look alikes' for photographs and film. Milk is often replaced with a mixture of white glue thinned with water.
Those kinds of photos are made with a flash delay unit. You have a flash with a very short "on" time--1/10000 second or so--a sensor, and a timer. You also have a camera, and you do this in a completely dark room. When it comes time to take the photo, you open the shutter and release a drop of milk. The drop passes through the sensor, which starts the timer. After a certain number of milliseconds, the flash fires. Hopefully, it fires when the drop looks the best...so you're best off to make a lot of pictures at different delay settings.
■4296 gallons of milk are sold. 2864/2=1432 1432x3=4296
Cereal with milk is a heterogeneous mixture.
Cereal goes first and then pour in the milk. Otherwise if you put milk first it will overflow when the heavier cereal goes in.
Milk and cereal is a heterogeneous mixture.
Personally, I pour the milk in after.
Some people like to put the milk before the cereal, and others the cereal before the milk. I don't think it really matters. It depends how you want it. Most people prefer cereal then the milk.
Adding more milk does not make cereal go soggie, letting the cereal soak in the milk for a certain amout of minutes makes cereal soggie.
latte
Physical because the milk doesn't change the composition of the cereal.
He takes two cups: 1 full of milk and 1 full of cereal he eats the cereal and drinks the milk with it
because they like the taste and your cereal is in milk, and cats LOVE milk so that is why your strange cat is eating your cereal :/
Yes you can use any type of milk on cereal. You would add water to evaporated milk to give it the thinner consistency of fresh milk, but it will taste different.