It depends on how much salt water you drink, if you drink a cup a day for a week and then stop drinking salt water you will die in a year...
Salt and water can be separated by heating the salt solution. The solution is heated till the water turns into steam. When entire water steams out, the white particles left behind is known as salt. This is the first step in obtaining salt from sea water. There water is collected in large areas and the water is allowed to evaporate. After the water evaporates the salt left behind is impure. So further processes are done on that impure salt to make it pure.
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With some foods, such as cakes, breads and puddings, you can't. If the food is rinseable, such as rice or beans, you can rinse it under running water and then reheat it. If it is a solid food that has absorbed salt, such as meat, soaking in an ample amount of cold water for a half an hour, pouring off the water, and repeating the process until the food is no longer too salty can work sometimes.
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).
this is for science test corrections, i couldn't find it. well it actually depends what kind of salt you are gonna use to find out till when it will saturate
Even if you simply air dry the sea water, you can easily find the salt. You have many alternatives too. You can also boil the water till all the water evaporates to find the salt as a residue.
Salt and water can be separated by heating the salt solution. The solution is heated till the water turns into steam. When entire water steams out, the white particles left behind is known as salt. This is the first step in obtaining salt from sea water. There water is collected in large areas and the water is allowed to evaporate. After the water evaporates the salt left behind is impure. So further processes are done on that impure salt to make it pure.
Salt and water can be separated by heating the salt solution. The solution is heated till the water turns into steam. When entire water steams out, the white particles left behind is known as salt. This is the first step in obtaining salt from sea water. There water is collected in large areas and the water is allowed to evaporate. After the water evaporates the salt left behind is impure. So further processes are done on that impure salt to make it pure.
nothing
salt forms on your eyebrows, undereyes, and many other places as your body's last effort to stop dehydration. when you have gotten near the point of dehydration your body releases salt out of your sweat glands to clog the pores and keep you from sweating out all the water in your system and prevent you from dying of dehydration. So when you start to notice salt forming it means you have reached your body's critical point and you need to stop whatever you're doing and start drinking till you start sweating again (note: this may take as long as an hour so a just getting a glass of water and heading back out is NOT acceptable!)
For the most part, there shouldn't be any side effects unless the pool is heavily salted (such as an ocean tidal pool) or the dog drinks a lot. In these cases, your dog may vomit the water back up, or drink more fresh water and have to urinate a lot for the next couple of days. In general, dogs won't drink salt water past the point of salt satiation unless there are no other sources of water available.
As long as the water temperature of the new water is the same as the old water, it is ok after about 5 minutes.
about 10 seconds
TILL IT GOES BAD
till there 7 months
1. evaporation 2. evaporation there you go sorry i don't actualy know either
I dont know the correct answer sadly but i know that the previous one was sarcastic, stupid, and an annoying play on words.