It absorbs the extra salt and becomes more dense. Normal salt water has a density of 1025 Kg/M3.
Yes, salt is a solute in seawater. Water is the solvent, salt is one of the solutes, and the solution is seawater.
Seawater is water with salt in it
Yes, salt dissolves in seawater, so it is a solute.
Let the water evaporate and you'll be left with salt. Seawater is saltwater.
The most important salt in seawater is sodium chloride, NaCl.
sea salt
An evenly mixed mixture is called a homogeneous mixture, where the components are uniformly distributed throughout. Seawater is an example of a homogeneous mixture because the salt and water are evenly mixed at a molecular level, giving the solution a consistent composition.
it goes boom
No, salt is obtained by evaporating seawater or by mining rocks formed by the evaporation of seawater.
The salt would dissolve, which you can reverse by boiling the water.
The cup of seawater has more salt, but the concentration, that is, the amount that it is diluted, is exactly the same.
Sodium chloride is the most important salt in the seawater.