Homogeneous, then it is classified as a Colloid.
The terms homogeneous and heterogeneous depend on the scale at which one is investigating. At the microscopic level, milk is heterogeneous; poured into a glass, milk is homogeneous.
As a sedimentary rock, it is heterogeneous
Well, it is NOT. Sugar is a (homogenous) white crystallic soloid or when dissolved it is in homogenous solution (like tea, honey, limonade drinks).
it is hetrogenous
pencil is hetrogenous because it consists of wood and lead, but if they tell that lead, that will be an element, which symbol is pb.
mech. mixture are hetrogenous mixture while solution is the one that reactant dissolved completly(homogenous)
homogenous mixtures dissolve eg salt & water. hetrogenous mixtures do not dissolve eg chalk powder & water.
No, milk is always a mixture.
homogenous
Homogenous, or homogenicity.
homogenous because: "Homogeneous mixtures: air, blood, saturated sugar water A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture where the components of the mixture are not uniform or have localized regions with different properties. Heterogeneous mixtures: rocks, oil and water, soup, pizza" Quote Sourced out from About.com
A homogenous mixture will look like it is just one substance, mayonnaise for example. You can't distinguish the individual components, it looks the same throughout. A heterogeneous mixture will be more like a salad. You can see the individual ingredients, it doesn't look the same throughout.
No. Chemistry texts have long cited milk as a good example of a heterogeneous mixture. Milk "homogenization" is a high-pressure filtration process that just breaks the fat particles down into smaller particles so that they are more evenly dispersed throughout the milk.