tap water will evaporate the fastest. I know this because i did the experiment for school.
the same. the salt isn't evaporated, only the h2o, so fresh and salt water evaporate the same unless there is another liquid in one of the two types of water.
All seas have salt water because they have sand which has salt.
Because salt is dense, so denser the water the better you float!
The evaporation technique, simply leave the salt water to stand near a window during sunny weather, and over time the water will evaporate leaving just salt crystals behind.
All rivers are by definition fresh water unless they are very polluted. There is, however, a portion of every river that reaches an ocean that is called an estuary. this is where the fresh water coming downstream mingles with the salty tidal water of the ocean.
SALT will evaporate the fastes
At the same temperature fresh water evaporates faster.
Pure water is evaporated faster.
Fresh water evaporates faster because the dissolved salts in salt water raise the boiling point by strengthening the intermolecular bonds water molecules have with each other. It's why you salt pasta water--to increasing the boiling point of the water so you can cook it at a higher temperature (and season the pasta). Adding salts also lower the freezing point of water, which is why people salt roads before snow.
Yes, salt can evaporate from water. When water evaporates, it leaves behind the salt, which does not evaporate.
they would both evaporate at the same rate just the sugar would be left behind in a more natural state. same way you get salt out of salt water.
The water would evaporate, leaving the salt behind.
the same. the salt isn't evaporated, only the h2o, so fresh and salt water evaporate the same unless there is another liquid in one of the two types of water.
it depends but i will take longer than fresh water
Fresh water evaporates faster than salt water because salt water has a lower vapor pressure due to the presence of dissolved salt. This means that fresh water molecules are more likely to escape into the air as vapor compared to salt water molecules.
When salt water evaporates, the water molecules rise as vapor, leaving the salt molecules behind. This vapor then cools and condenses to form clouds, eventually leading to precipitation as rain. The rainwater is then collected as fresh water.
Salt water will evaporate faster.