This is an oddly dumb question....
because there are 2 totally different types of molecules, you have the polar and apolar molecules. the polar molecules will only dissolve in a polar solvent, the apolar moleculesin a apolar solvent. this is the reason why oil doesn't mix with water. oil is apolar and water polar
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
Sugar will dissolve faster in hot water than it will in cold water.
If the phospholipids in your cell membranes were suddenly able to dissolve in water, you would become a thick puddle on the floor. You are basically one big aqueous solution, and the cell membranes are the only thing keeping the cell compartmentalized.
Hot water. Hot water can also dissolve slightly more sugar than cold water can.
they cant dissolve in cold water so how would they grow ; they wont it is not possible only with warm water theyll dissolve but there still there
Solution = a solute (something to dissolve) and solvent (the one who makes the other dissolve) Water and Ice: Same thing. It wouldn't help to melt the ice. It's just more H2O. Water and Oil: This wouldn't work. The oil would literally "sit" on top of the water. Water and Sand: Sand is is SiO2 which is nonpolar and also wouldn't dissolve in water. (Which is good! If it DID dissolve in water, we wouldn't have beaches!) Water and Salt: YES! Salt is a polar molecule, as is water, so the water would dissolve salt and create a solution.
A good hypothesis could be: "I hypothesize that soap will dissolve in water because the hydrophilic (water-attracting) part of the soap molecule will interact with the water molecules, leading to the breakdown of the soap into its components."
Dyes are mostly aqueous solutions so they will dissolve in water.
Water could be poisonous as some hard metals would dissolve into in with out the presence of DO. As well, fish and aquatic plant would die if there was no oxygen. Drinking water would not taste as good either. A good thing that could occur would be that pipes would not corrode as quickly.
Yes, water is a very good solvent but not universal.
No, it is insoluble but it looses all good paper properties.