Because the oil is less dense then the water.
Because oil has non polar ions and water has polar ions they do not mix together, thus separating them.
No, vegetable oil is not soluble in water. It is a non-polar substance, while water is polar, leading to their inability to mix. When combined, vegetable oil will form a separate layer on top of the water due to its lower density. This is why oil and water do not blend well together.
Liquid water is held together by hydrogen bonds. Oils and fats not have any polar part and so for them to dissolve in water they would have to break some of water's hydrogen bonds. ... Water will not do this so the oil is forced to stay separate from the water.
Vegetable oil is denser then water, so it floats on top. Oil is also a lipid, which is hydrophobic, meaning it does not like water. They do not mix.
no not if it is put together
water vapors combine together in the air. They form clouds.
through filtration
they will combine. Alcohol dissolves in water quite readily.
No, you cannot separate oil from water using a spoon. Oil and water do not mix, so they will not combine easily. To separate them, you can use a method like allowing them to settle and then manually removing the oil layer with a tool like a pipette.
alcohol has a greater volume because when you combine the two substances together water will desolve
no it does not it all gets together and turns to a solid
A possible hypothesis could be: "If salt is mixed with water and the solution is frozen, then the salt will not separate from the water, as both salt and water will freeze together into a solid."