Coffee is a homogeneous mixture (assuming it has been well-stirred), as the mixture has a uniform composition throughout. Dividing the mixture into macroscopic parts, each part will have the same composition as the
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original mixture.
heterogeneous
Yes. Black coffee is a homogeneous mixture.
homogeneous
Homogeneous .
Black coffee is a homogeneous mixture. Since there are no other substances, like sugar or milk, it is homogeneous.
Heterogeneous mixture.
Only soluble (instant) coffee can form o homogeneous solution.
A cup of coffee is a homogeneous mixture. No matter what one uses to sweeten or lighten it, the coffee is the same in every sip.
It is heterogeneous because cream is not soluble in the coffee as sugar.
Just pure black coffee is a homogeneous mixture if it looks like its one entity (no little particles of sugar floating around, streaks of cream, etc.) basically if it looks like a solution (a mixture that seems to be made of only one thing) then it is a homogeneous mixture.
Coffee is a homogeneous mixture (assuming it has been well-stirred), as the mixture has a uniform composition throughout. Dividing the mixture into macroscopic parts, each part will have the same composition as the original mixture.
Coffee is a homogeneous mixture (assuming it has been well-stirred), as the mixture has a uniform composition throughout. Dividing the mixture into macroscopic parts, each part will have the same composition as the Save original mixture.