Well, honey, red cordial is a homogeneous mixture because it's all mixed up evenly. It's like a well-behaved cocktail where every drop is the same, unlike a messy fruit salad where you never know what you're gonna get. So, in the world of chemistry, red cordial is as uniform as a perfectly ironed shirt.
Glittery red nail polish is a heterogeneous mixture because it contains visible glitter particles that are not evenly distributed throughout the polish.
HomogEmits as there is only one species of candy in the mixture. The "red and white" variety. If there were various species in the mixture then it would be heterogenous.
Heterogeneous means non-uniform, so mango is arguably heterogeneous; you have the skin, pulp, seed etc. in a mixture, although it is stretching the interpretation of "mixture" when it would be more conventional to consider a single skin, a single seed (mangos have only one seed) and one continuous piece of pulp as discrete parts. The question also ask about "mango", not " a mango" - which implies it is not about a whole fruit. (Many homogeneous mixtures are easily separated - a mixture of powdered sugar and chalk, or a bag of green and red marbles, for instance. Although, again, it depends on what level you are considering the "mixture").
Filtered blood is a homogeneous mixture because the act of filtration scrambles the blood cells, proteins, and carbohydrate conponents of the blood. Filtration is applied to ensure that heterogeneous clumps do not form, and the blood can readily be used for transfusion.
Blood is not a compound; it is a mixture composed of different components such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. These components are not chemically bonded together, making blood a heterogeneous mixture, not a compound.
Glittery red nail polish is a heterogeneous mixture because it contains visible glitter particles that are not evenly distributed throughout the polish.
HomogEmits as there is only one species of candy in the mixture. The "red and white" variety. If there were various species in the mixture then it would be heterogenous.
Heterogeneous means non-uniform, so mango is arguably heterogeneous; you have the skin, pulp, seed etc. in a mixture, although it is stretching the interpretation of "mixture" when it would be more conventional to consider a single skin, a single seed (mangos have only one seed) and one continuous piece of pulp as discrete parts. The question also ask about "mango", not " a mango" - which implies it is not about a whole fruit. (Many homogeneous mixtures are easily separated - a mixture of powdered sugar and chalk, or a bag of green and red marbles, for instance. Although, again, it depends on what level you are considering the "mixture").
Filtered blood is a homogeneous mixture because the act of filtration scrambles the blood cells, proteins, and carbohydrate conponents of the blood. Filtration is applied to ensure that heterogeneous clumps do not form, and the blood can readily be used for transfusion.
Blood is not a compound; it is a mixture composed of different components such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. These components are not chemically bonded together, making blood a heterogeneous mixture, not a compound.
Blood is considered a heterogeneous mixture because it is composed of different components that can be physically distinguished, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. These components do not blend uniformly throughout the mixture.
A conglomerate rock is a heterogeneous material.
Blood is a homogeneous mixture because it is the same everywhere in one's body. A homogeneous mixture is like a cup of coffee. In the cup, the sugar, creme, and coffee are evenly mixed. A heterogeneous mixture is like a bowl of Fruit Loops. The different colors of the cereal are not mixed with each other. Homogeneous mixtures are the same throughout, and heterogeneous mixtures are different throughout. ACTUALLY THAT IS WRONG I JUST TOOK AN EXAM THE ANSWER IS HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURE BECAUSE ITS NOT EVENLY THROUGHOUT BUT HAS DIFFERENT COMPOSITIONS
Blood is a heterogeneous mixture because it is composed of different components such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. These components are not evenly distributed throughout the mixture.
Blood is a heterogeneous mixture. It is composed of various components such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma that are physically distinct and can be separated through techniques like centrifugation.
Blood is a mixture because it is composed of different components such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. It is considered a heterogeneous mixture because you can see the individual components with the naked eye.
When you melt butter, you'll find milk solids floating on the surface. This means that the mixture itself has indeed been separated, heterogenization, that is - it has lost it's uniformity. A heterogeneous mixture is one that has phases in which the particles can be separated by physical means - heat being one of them. By appearance, butter does seem to be a homogeneous mixture - when you spread it, it is indeed uniform throughout. But because it's particles can be physically segregated, it is otherwise a homogeneous mixture. So yes, because it's particles can be separated physically, it is classed as a heterogeneous mixture. Blood is also a good example. Seemingly homogeneous - but when you place it in a centrifuge, it separates into the red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets and the blood plasma. Hope this clears up your question about heterogeneous mixtures