This is a colloidal mixture.
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.
They are called "colloids". These have large particles that are suspended in a solution.
Salt crystals dissolved in water.
Colloids are mixtures that contain small particles suspended in a medium. These particles are large enough to scatter light, causing the mixture to appear cloudy or opaque when light is shone through it.
The mixture is called a colloid. Colloids have particles that are larger than those in a solution but smaller than those in a suspension. The particles are dispersed throughout the mixture and do not settle due to the particles being combined with a dispersing medium.
because the particles in their mixtures are large enough to scatter light
This mixture would likely be a suspension, where larger particles are suspended in a liquid, causing the scattering or blocking of light as it passes through. Examples of suspensions include muddy water or fog.
A heterogeneous mixture where particles are large enough to be seen with the naked eye is a suspension. An example of this is settled mud in water.
heterogeneous mixture.
This type of mixture is called a colloidal suspension. The particles in a colloidal suspension are larger than those in a solution, making them scatter light and giving the mixture a cloudy appearance. Despite being suspended, the particles do not settle out due to Brownian motion keeping them dispersed throughout the medium.
This is the heterogeneous mixture where particles are large enough to be seen with the naked eye.