Evaporation produces a different state of matter, gas rather than liquid, but you wouldn't call it a new state, just another one.
When a log burns in a fireplace, the matter in the log undergoes a chemical reaction called combustion. The heat from the fire breaks down the chemical bonds in the wood, releasing energy in the form of heat and light. The carbon in the wood combines with oxygen in the air to form carbon dioxide and other byproducts like water vapor and ash.
Boiling the water solution the hydrogen chloride is released as a gas.
One method to separate sugar and water is through the process of evaporation. By heating the mixture, the water evaporates, leaving the sugar behind. The water vapor can be collected and cooled to recover the water.
A pure substance contains only one kind of matter. It cannot be separated into other substances by physical means.
This is a chemical element.
Water remain water, only the state of matter is changed from liquid to solid.
It does not matter what the material dissolved in water. The only thing that matters is how much is dissolved. So neither.
the wet kind
sedimentary
A very impure water is evaporated slower.
Evaporation is a physical process.
Differences are not significant.
salt water and tap water
Yes and no. Yes because it does keep its form kind of when it evaporates. All that happenes is that it just turnes into a less dense form. Then no because when it evaporates it is a gas until it changes again.
The sediment is a mixture of sand, soil, salts, detritus.
Very hot. Direct sunlight continuously on the pond.
Sodium chloride and other chlorides remain as a residue.