A soln wil be obtained.
when you mixed liquid to another liquid its mix together
They won't mix. You will get two separate layers of liquid.
It dissolves, exchanging it's particles with the liquid, and therefore becoming part of the liquid.
You will get nasty grape juice mixed with soap
Depends on the temperature of the liquid, and whether it will mix with water. If it is above 0C, the ice will cool it down. The ice will melt, and may mix with and dilute the liquid. If the liquid is below 0C, nothing much will happen until it warms up again.
when you mixed liquid to another liquid its mix together
A soln wil be obtained.
A soln wil be obtained.
When two liquids with different temperatures are mixed, heat will transfer from the hotter liquid to the cooler one until they reach thermal equilibrium. The temperature of the combined liquid will eventually become an average of the initial temperatures.
yes you can mix the two in liquid suspension.
Place a solid (that won't dissolve) in water and the solid will displace its weight, causing the water level to rise proportionally. Add a pint of liquid to a pint of water and you should have 2 pints of liquid in solution.
If you pour liquid helium into liquid nitrogen, the helium will not mix with the nitrogen and will instead form separate layers. Helium is lighter than nitrogen and has a lower boiling point, so the helium will tend to float on top of the nitrogen.