You get salt water.
Some or all of the salt will dissolve into the water. This depends on the temperature of the water, and the presence of any other solutes in the water.
salt water
It is quite easy to mix salt water and fresh water, which produces a more dilute form of salt water.
no
When you place salt in water, the salt crystals dissolve into the water, breaking down into their individual ions. This process is called dissociation, where the sodium and chloride ions from the salt mix evenly with the water molecules. This results in a salty solution without any visible salt particles remaining in the water.
The amount of salt water you get will depend on the concentration of salt in the water. When you mix salt with water, the salt dissolves into the water to increase its volume slightly. The overall volume of the salt water will be the sum of the volumes of the original salt and water components.
When you mix distilled water with salt and soup, the result is dilute soup.
Yes. Salt (at least common table salt) is water soluble.
When you first mix the salt into the solution the salt will dissolve into the water. As you keep on pouring more salt into the water eventually the salt will stop dissolving and once the salt stops dissolving the solution is then saturated.
no
You get a mixture of salt and sand. Nothing more happens.
You get a salt solution.