Salt water is a homogeneous mixture (solution).
When completely dissolved, salt water is homogeneous.
it is an homogenous mixture....maybe(:
It is neither heterogenous nor heterogenous. It is HOMOgenous
Sodium chloride (table salt) is a compound - NaCl.
In a homogenous mixture, the different components are not readily discernible. In a heterogeneous mixture, they can be seen and sometime separate of their own accord. For example, oil and water is heterogeneous, while salt and water are homogenous.
a salt solution is homogenous.
A mixture of salt and water, if stirred until the salt is completely dissolved, is a homogenous mixture.
The kind of mixture between salt water and mud is Heterogenous. A heterogenous mixture is made of different substances that remain physically separate.
A homogeneous mixture is the same throughout, such as Koolaid or salt water. A heterogeneous is not the same throughout, like beef stew or jello with fruit in it.
Yes. Salt water is a homogeneous mixture.
Its heterogenous... heterogenous is two or more materials mixed in and you can tell they are present, homogenous is when you cannot tell they are seperate such as salt water.
Heterogenous and Homogenous mixtures. Homogenous mixtures are uniform in appearance. Sea water is a mixture containing primarily Sodium Chloride and water. If you take a sample of this mixture, you will see that the salt fully dissolves in water and the sample is uniform in appearance. Heterogenous mixtures non-uniform. You can see the components of the mixture. An Example is a mixture of oil and water. Oil does not dissolve in water and forms a separate layer above water.
No, its not a homogenous mixture as sugar and sugar are not distributed uniformly. However, sugar in water and salt in water is a homogenous mixture.