A homogenous substance is one in a single phase. The term homogeneous is used in material science and physical chemistry. Sulfur, water, sucrose, and baking soda are examples of homogenous substances, which are also known as pure substances.
yes
A homogenous mixture of two or more substances that are not solutions is a colloid. Colloids have particles that are larger than the particles in a solution, but still do not settle out over time. Examples of colloids include milk and fog.
homogenous
a solution
Heterogeneous. It's a combination of two homogenous substances - hydrogen, and oxygen. What you're describing is hydrogen peroxide, by the way.
Yes, tea is a mixture of many organic substances.
I think what you meant to ask is why does a solution look homogenous, and it is solely because a solution IS homogenous. A homogenous mix, is a mix between 2 or more substances where the mix appears as only one substance Opposingly, a heterogenous mixture is a mix of 2 or more substances where all of the substances can be identified by the human naked eye.
Urine is not considered to be a mixture, it is actually a solution. However, it is, indeed, a homogenous solution.
no homogeneous substances is not uniform as it contains mixture of many substances and therefore all particles cannot remain in fixed ratio.
Garlic salt is a homogeneous mixture because it consists of two or more substances that are evenly distributed throughout.
homogenous mixture
Salt water Ethanol Air Sugar solution Pure gold