The salt dissolves into the water. You can undo this reaction by boiling the water so it evaporates then you will be left with just salt.
the salt dissolves in the water and changes the taste it is achemical reaction ...it is a reversible reaction...because you can get the two different elements in the solution(solvent i.e water and solute i.e salt) back by boiling and condensation..
Put salt in water and stir; salt is very soluble.
The salt dissolves in the water
solvent
1.get salt 2.get water 3.pour salt into water 4.stir the salt and water until the salt is invisible
When you stir table salt into a glass of water, you are forming a solution. The salt particles dissolve in the water, creating a homogeneous mixture where the salt is evenly distributed throughout the liquid.
If you put salt in water, stir and can't see the salt anymore, it's mixed.
Fill a glass with water and add salt out of its container to the water and stir. Voila you've got salt water.
Stirring is a physical process.
When you stir salt in water, the salt dissolves into the water at a molecular level, forming a homogenous solution. This makes it appear as if the salt has disappeared, but it has actually just spread out evenly throughout the water.
In this scenario, the solute would be the salt, as it is the substance being dissolved in the water. The solvent is the water, which is doing the dissolving of the salt particles.
Salt dissolves in water relatively quickly, with the rate of dissolution depending on factors such as temperature and stirring. In general, table salt can fully dissolve in water within a few minutes if the water is agitated or warm.