Differences are not significant.
my answer is yes because if water can evaporate applejuice can.
Many liquids evaporate, one example is water
Orange juice is made up mostly of water. So the water in orange juice will evaporate at the same rate as clear water. Of course the parts of the juice that are not water will remain behind. One theory is that the orange juice will absorb more light than water because of its colour.
Water is evaporated faster.
materials: apple juice orange juice grape juice cranberry juice soda water
Orange juice does evaporate, but at a slower rate compared to water due to its thicker consistency and sugar content. The evaporation process is affected by the composition of the liquid, so orange juice will eventually evaporate if left exposed to air, just more slowly than water.
Water evaporate faster.
At higher temperature evaporation is faster.
Melting is turing a solid into a liquid. Juice is already a liquid therefore you cannot melt it Technically, you can't melt juice, because melting refers to the state change from a solid to a liquid, and since juice is already a liquid, you can't melt juice.
Orange juice will because anything that has added sugar will because it has less h2o.
Salt water will evaporate first. Salt takes up space so to speak and there's less "water" to evaporate and so it seems to evaporate faster.
Water, since it's pure. Juice has many other things in it, including sugar, so it would actually turn into a syrup.