No, pebbles in water does not make a solution. The pebbles are solid, and remain just as they are when put into the water. A solution forms when the solute (the solid component of a solution) has been uniformly distributed within the solvent (the liquid component). This isn't happening in the situation described.
If you mix salt and water, the salt will dissolve into the water. If you mix pebbles and water, the pebbles and water will stay being separate objects
An *aqueous* solution is formed when a substance is dissolved in water. The term "aqueous" stands for the latin word "aqua" which means water.
No solution is concentrated when there is water in it
Yes, salt mixed in water is a solution. Specifically a homogeneous solution.
The water in a solution is called the solvent
A mixture of pebbles and water would be heterogeneous.
Sand and pebbles is a heterogeneous mixture. A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
Sand and pebbles is a heterogeneous mixture. A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
it's a mixture !
vnekifvnlekfvn
Filtration will separate the pebbles and water ... Pour the mixture through a strainer (or better yet, an old burlap bag) and catch the water in a bucket. The pebbles will remain in the strainer or bag.
filter or decant leaving behind the pebbles. evaporate the water leaving behind the sugar.
the pebbles at the front of the beach get eroded by the water
If you mix salt and water, the salt will dissolve into the water. If you mix pebbles and water, the pebbles and water will stay being separate objects
Their mass was greater than that of the water.
in my science book it says pebbles move .75 cm/sec
You can drink the water.