yes
no, a homogeneous mixture is salt water, seawater has other particles in it like sand, bacteria, and other debris that can be seen making it heterogeneous
seawater is a homogeneous mixture. The water being the solvent and the salt being the solute. A heterogeneous mixture is mixed but not as thoroughly as a homogeneous mixture. None of these though are chemically combined, none are compounds. (hence mixture)
An evenly mixed mixture is called a homogeneous mixture, where the components are uniformly distributed throughout. Seawater is an example of a homogeneous mixture because the salt and water are evenly mixed at a molecular level, giving the solution a consistent composition.
yes
Seawater is not perfectly homogeneous because it contains varying concentrations of salts, gases, nutrients, and microorganisms throughout different parts of the ocean. However, on a macroscopic scale, seawater is considered a homogeneous mixture because its composition is fairly uniform and consistent.
Seawater is a mixture. It is a combination of salt and water that is a homogeneous mixture. An example of a pure substance is either pure salt or pure sugar.
Seawater is considered to be homogeneous because it is a mixture of various salts and minerals that are evenly distributed throughout. This means that properties such as salinity and temperature are consistent throughout the body of seawater.
Yes, seawater is a solution made up of several elements and compounds dissolved in water, such as salt (sodium chloride), magnesium, and calcium. It is considered a homogeneous mixture.
This mixture is not homogeneous.
homogeneous
Gelatin is a homogeneous mixture.
Seawater is water (H2O which is a compound) containing soluble compounds but also insoluble materials. We can consider, with approximation, that the seawater is a homogeneous solution.