Because the pepper is not dissolved by the water - it would then be a solution.
No it is a special kind of mixture
Pepper will not dissolve in water.
No, a mixture of pepper and water would not be considered a solution. In chemistry, a solution is a homogeneous mixture where one substance (the solute) is dissolved in another substance (the solvent). In this case, pepper does not dissolve in water, so it would not form a solution. Instead, it would be considered a suspension, where the pepper particles are suspended in the water but do not dissolve.
No because pepper is not solution in water. Thank You
No. If you have a mixture of water and ground pepper, you can separate the pepper by pouring the mixture through a funnel lined with filter paper. The water will pass through the paper leaving the pepper behind.
To separate ground pepper and water, you can use a filter or strainer. Pour the mixture through the filter, and the water will pass through while the ground pepper gets caught in the filter. Alternatively, you could evaporate the water by heating the mixture, leaving the ground pepper behind.
Black pepper is a mixture, might have had different growth fertilizers. Distilled water is pure, and is a pure substance.
A salted mixture is obtained.
Salt is soluble in water, unlike pepper, so you can put the mixture in water and filter it using a coffee filter. The pepper will stay in the coffee filter and the salt can be separated from the water by leaving the solution in the sun.
The mixture is heterogeneous.
no it cannot
First put the mixture in a colander and separate the salt and pepper from the pebbles. Then put the salt and pepper in water and stir it to dissolve the salt. The pepper will not dissolve, and you can remove the pepper. Then allow the water to dissolve and you will be left with the salt.