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Coke
Yes, salt commonly forms crystals; so it is crystalline.
Quartz has a few forms of crystalline structure, like polymorphs as well as amorphous forms. All the crystalline has are tetrahedral SiO2 units all linked together to form the crystalline structure.
Ice at 0oC is the metastable point for ice (solid water) and liquid water. Both phases can exist at this temperature, colder temperatures lead to the formation of Ice 1 (one of the 15 crystalline forms of ice) while temperatures higher than 0oC lead to the fusion of the ice into water
A snowflake is a solid crystalline structure of ice.
Coke
Crystalline
no, but ice is.
Yes, ice is a crystalline solid.
Yes, salt commonly forms crystals; so it is crystalline.
Ice is the crystalline form of water MOLECULES
There are 15 known crystalline forms of water, one is called Ice [Ih] which is normal hexagonal crystalline ice. Virtually all ice in the biosphere is ice Ih, with the exception only of a small amount of ice Ic. Ic is a metastable cubic crystalline variant of ice. The oxygen atoms are arranged in a diamond structure. It is produced at temperatures between 130 and 220 K, and can exist up to 240 K, when it transforms into ice Ih. It may occasionally be present in the upper atmosphere.
In a salt shaker. In a salt shaker. Quartz, salt, sugar, ice, or anything that forms a crystalline form of structure highly transparent.
It is crystalline in appearance, hence, Ice
Sort of, snow is a conglomeration of many solids. They're all ice, but obviously snow and ice are quite different.
The anhydrous barium chloride has an orthogonal crystalline structure.
Quartz has a few forms of crystalline structure, like polymorphs as well as amorphous forms. All the crystalline has are tetrahedral SiO2 units all linked together to form the crystalline structure.