No. Water and ice do not make a homogeneous mixture.
No, because two phases exist.
A glass of ice water is a heterogeneous mixture, not a homogeneous one. This is because ice and water are two different phases, despite being the same substance.
a homogenous mixture
yes a homogenous substance is one in which you cannot differentiate between the parts of the mixture. a hetereogeneous mixture for example, might be a salad or a glass of water with ice.
Yes. Salt water is a homogeneous mixture.
Sugar water
Ice in water is a heterogenous mix because even though ice is made of water the ice can still be seen. An homogenous mix is one where the different substances are totally mixed and it appears as one substance.
Ice is considered homogeneous because it is made up of pure water molecules arranged in a uniform structure. This means that the composition and properties of ice are consistent throughout, making it a homogeneous substance.
homogenous
Ice is solid H2O so it is a pure substance, thus homogenous, particle size is irrelevant
Tea and ice would be e heterogeneous mixture.
A glass of ice water is a heterogeneous mixture, not a homogeneous one. This is because ice and water are two different phases, despite being the same substance.
Homogeneous
Yes. Homogenous refers to if the solution is consistant looking throughout. Oil and water, for example, would not be homogenous because water is polar and oil is usually non-polar and would not mix.
A mixture of salt and water, if stirred until the salt is completely dissolved, is a homogenous mixture.
homogenous.
No
In fact, it isn't even a mixture. Ice cubes and distilled water both are just water in two different states.