Homogenized milk is still a mixture. The milk still contains water, fat and other minerals such as calcium. Homogenized milk only looks instead of settling at the bottom of a glass.
Homogenised milk is a homogeneous colloidal dispersion of the milk solids in the liquid milk. The colloidal particles are sized as per the requirements in high-speed colloidal mills. It is not a heterogeneous mixture.
Yes. For example, homogenized milk is a homogeneous mixture
milk is a homogenized mixture, that means it is made to look the same throughout
milk is a homogenized mixture, that means it is made to look the same throughout
Homogenized milk is a solution. Because in a solution the particles are evenly distributed. Where as in a heterogenized mixture they are not and you can see the different particles. Therefore homogenized milk is a solution.
It's something got to do with non homogenised milk and emulsion.
no, homogenized milk does not have the fat removed.
The fresh milk that comes from cows is a mixture of water, fat (also called butterfat or milkfat), and milk solids.(See Link) Related info: just because it says homogenized doesn't make it so. Homogenized milk has smaller droplets of butterfat suspended in it. You can tell that it is a suspension because it displays the Tyndall effect (it scatters light).
Milk is a Mixture and a Solution.Milk is both a mixture and a solution; By definition a mixture is a combination of two substances that are mixed together, and milk is a homogenous mixture (which is also known as a solution).
Yes. I like to think of heterogeneous mixtures as a chocolate chip cookie, where you can see the components of the mixture; and homogeneous mixtures as a glass of milk, where you can't see the components of the mixture (milk is homogenized, get it?).
A mixture become homogeneous when is homogenized.
By sucking the soul out of the milk.