no because salt melts really fast like it melts snow fast!
Saline solutions have a lower melting point than water, so helps melt ice and snow on water. However, to my (and wikipedia's) knowledge, it doesn't effect it's evaporation rate.
Solutes affect the physical properties of water.
Yes. You can separate water from a salt solution by evaporation.
EvaporationIf your intent is to have both products--salt and water, then the process is called distillation, in which the water is boiled away and collected.
By evaporation of the water and crystallization of the salt.
Salt will slow freezing, but not evaporation. As say salt water evaporates, it will leave behind its salt contents, but it will not evaporate any slower than fresh water.
Warm the water
Not at all because when the water evaporates the salt remains unchanged
Because the process of evaporation leaves behind salt and rain is an result of evaporation
salt evaperats faster than all of sugar and salt mixed and your mom ( . ) ( . )
Old ans: "salt usually doesnt affect the evaporation of water because when the water is evaporated, the salt is left behind." The a/m ans is out of point. Whilst salt doesn't evaporate, it reduces evaporation by i) increasing the boiling point by: ii) ionic bonding to H2O. This bonding 'stickiness to water moleq' makes it more difficult for the H2O to evaporate (vaporize). So yet, salt content affects the evaporation of H2O by reducing it.
The evaporation is slower from impure solutions.
Solutes affect the physical properties of water.
The evaporation of water is slow when water is dissolved in salt. This is because of the salt molecules, the salt molecules is the reason for the slow evaporation.
Yes. You can separate water from a salt solution by evaporation.
Salt can be obtained by evaporation of sea water.
By evaporation of water sodium chloride is obtained.
Salt is obtained after the evaporation of water.