No
It becomes Barium Nitrate combined with Silver Chloride
Yellow Precipitate of Silver Bromide
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
Silver nitrate will dissolve in distilled water. When added to a salt solution silver chloride will fall out of solution.
Silver chloride precipitates from the solution.
This reaction is not possible.
Silver nitrate does not "react" with light, because light is not a substance. Light can catalyze the autodecompositon of silver nitrate.
It becomes Barium Nitrate combined with Silver Chloride
The silver in the Silver Nitrate precipitates the chloride ions out of the ammonium chloride solution, leaving Ammonium Nitrate in solution and a Silver Chloride solid.
Yellow Precipitate of Silver Bromide
silver chloride should precipitate out.
they turn purple..
you die
Silver iodide (AgI), a precipitate insoluble in water, don't react with potassium nitrate.
No reaction is observed because they have same anions, Nitrates
It turns black or dark in colour when silver nitrate is exposed to sunlight.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.