Salt water
I would think it would dissolve faster in fresh water, as the fresh water doesn't have anything dissolved in it yet whereas the salt water has dissolved salts and so less room for the sugar molecules. A. yes; sugar does dissolve faster than salt does, in fresh water.
I suppose that the dissolution is faster in fresh water but the differences are minimal.
It will dissolve faster in fresh water.
It dissolves faster in fresh water
magic
lt water because slat melts things faster even tho some water has salt in it
Depends on the pH of the water but it would dissolve faster in fresh water because there isn't as much stuff in solution. true... but it took me about 8.30 seconds to dissolve with the perfect pH.....
Theoretically, (provided that the water samples were of the same temperature), the teaspoon of salt would dissolve faster in the fresh water because the salt water is closer to its saturation point than the fresh water.
Salt water melts faster than fresh water because salt lowers the freezing point of water. This means that salt water needs to be even colder than fresh water to freeze, leading to a faster melting rate when exposed to warmer temperatures.
An object would sink faster in salt water because salt water is denser than fresh water. The higher density in salt water creates more buoyant force, allowing objects to sink faster than in fresh water.
Fresh aluminum foil has a shiny and metallic luster, reflecting light due to its smooth surface.
Fresh water evaporate faster.