Yes it is because parts of the juice settle to the bottom if it isn't stirred for awhile and a it contains clumps of a solid.
Orange juice from concentrate would be a solution, although real orange juice is neither a solution or a suspension. The major difference between solution and suspension is that a solution is a homogeneous mixture, and a suspension is heterogeneous.
Freshly squeezed orange juice is a heterogeneous mixture, specifically a suspension. This is because the pulp and other insoluble particles from the orange are suspended in the liquid portion of the juice.
Orange juice is primarily a suspension, as it contains pulp and other solid particles that can settle over time. While it does have some dissolved substances, such as sugars and acids, the presence of larger particles makes it distinct from a true solution. In a colloid, the particles are dispersed but do not settle, which is not entirely the case with orange juice due to its pulp content. Thus, it is best classified as a suspension.
both....the juice is a colloid in the water and the pulp is in suspension in the orange juice.
Orange juice is not typically homogeneous; it is often a suspension of water, sugars, acids, and various compounds from the oranges, along with pulp and juice. When freshly squeezed, orange juice can separate over time, with pulp settling at the bottom and liquid rising to the top. However, commercially produced orange juice may undergo homogenization processes to create a more uniform texture, yet it can still contain pulp, making it a suspension rather than a true homogeneous mixture.
Milk is a colloid, where fat droplets are dispersed in water to form a stable mixture. Orange juice is a suspension, where pulp and other particles are dispersed in water but will settle over time. The milk remains stable due to the small size and uniform distribution of fat droplets, while the orange juice needs to be stirred to maintain an even distribution of particles.
it is a heterogeneous mixture with the pulp and homogeneous without the pulp. Its also a suspension (with the pulp), since the pulp settles on the bottom upon standing.
Yes it is because parts of the juice settle to the bottom if it isn't stirred for awhile and a it contains clumps of a solid.
Orange Juice orange juice
Orange juice, pond water, and Italian salad dressing are examples of liquid heterogeneous mixtures.
Because it's the juice from an orange which is in fact orange.
the orange juice is a liquid but the orange does not.