If you have a cooker with cap, continuously boil that mixture and collect the water drop in the cap (which from the water's evaporation) until the mixture is only solid.
No, if sand is included its heterogeneous.
This is a mixture of water and sea salt to pour over something to rinse it. Depending on what it is used for the temperature of the water can vary.
no, a homogeneous mixture is salt water, seawater has other particles in it like sand, bacteria, and other debris that can be seen making it heterogeneous
Sea water is considered a mixture, because it consists of several salts dissolved in water and they are not chemically combined. Since you can't distinguish its components with the naked eye, then it's a homogeneous mixture.
If you meant, how could you separate a mixture of sugar and sand, then you can disolve sugar in water, filter the sand out of the sugar water solution, then evaporate the water to get the sugar back by boiling it.
Sea water is not a homogeneous mixture.
The atmosphere (Mixture of Oxygen, Nitrogen, and other gases. The ocean (Mixture of water, various salts)
Seawater is a heterogeneous mixture.Seawater is not an element because it is not in a periodic table. Compound is a combination of two or more elements. Homogeneous mixture is like a salt-water(well mixed) Heterogeneous mixture is like a sand-water(not well mixed)
Sea water is not a homogeneous mixture.
Sea water is a homogeneous mixture because only one phase can be seen when you look at it (similar to homogenized milk).
1 Pour water on the mixture of salt and sand. 2 filter the salt water out of the sand with a filter paper. 3 evaporate the water out of the salt water, leaving only the salt. the problem with this is when the salt desolves in the water the salt water also soaks into the sand so really when the sand dries out there is salt
yes. because sea water is a mixture. it is not pure water.