You can't it is dissolved in water, but you can leave the dissolved water out over night and see if that works.Ok?
Yes. In aqueous form, baking soda conducts electricity, but not as a solid.
Metal hydroxides dissolved in water form basic solutions, with a pH greater than 7.
yes
It depends on whether it was dissolved in water or just crushed up. If it was dissolved in water, it should re-crystalize as the water evaporates. If it was crushed up, aside from dissolving it in water and waiting for it to evaporate off, or melting it in a glass pipe and letting it recrystalize, there's no other way that I can think of to return it to its rock form.
Caves are usually some form of limestone. The stone is VERY slowly dissolved by water, and the dissolved material leaves with the draining water. Typically this takes millions of years.
Yes. In aqueous form, baking soda conducts electricity, but not as a solid.
Vinegar and baking soda react to form carbon dioxide (a gas), water (a liquid), and sodium acetate which is solid in is pure form, but when formed by the vinegar-baking soda reaction is dissolved in water.
Dissolved minerals are usually in the form of ions. Therefore water that is free of dissolved minerals is called deionized water.
Grikes form when limestone is dissolved by water.
we can show that gases are dissolved in water by showing the gas escaping in the form of bubbles.
No it doesn't
When H is dissolved in water, it forms hydronium, or H3O. It is commonly known as a synthesis reaction.
Sweet water. Saturated or unsaturated solution, depending on the amount of sugar dissolved in the water.
ACID
Metal hydroxides dissolved in water form basic solutions, with a pH greater than 7.
An ionic compound dissolved in water form cations and anions.
When water and baking soda are stirred together, bubbles will form. These bubbles are carbon dioxide.