it is a thing called water!
A colloid is a mixture containing small undissolved particles that do not settle out. Examples of colloids include milk, fog, and gelatin.
A colloid is a mixture containing small undissolved particles that do not settle out. Examples include milk, gelatin, and fog.
A solution is a homogeneous mixture whose particles are too small to reflect or scatter light. A colloid is a heterogeneous mixture containing particles that are small enough to stay suspended but large enough to scatter light.
The mixture containing particles that are too small to be seen easily but large enough to scatter a light beam is a colloidal mixture. These particles are known as colloids and they are intermediate in size between true solutions and suspensions.
Yes, it does because tyndall effect is caused by scattering of light by small particles in colloidal solutions in transparent medium. (colloid means the mixture of particles less than size of particles in suspension)
That is called a solution. Solutions are homogeneous mixtures where one substance is dissolved in another, and the particles are too small to scatter light, rendering them transparent.
One difference is the size of particles: in a solution, particles are uniformly dispersed at a molecular level, whereas in a colloid, particles are larger and dispersed throughout the mixture but do not settle out.
Yes, two liquids with different particles can still form a homogeneous mixture if the particles are small enough to mix evenly throughout each other. This means that they would appear as one phase and have a uniform composition.
Endoplasmic Reticulum
A colloid.
A suspension is a mixture with small undissolved particles that do not settle out. These particles are typically visible to the naked eye and can be separated from the liquid by filtration. Examples include muddy water and Italian salad dressing.
It is a suspension of fine particles.