It will probably kill it, Tomato Juice is very acidic.
no.. because the minerals and vitamins that water has, and plants need, tomato juice doesn't have. besides, it would spoil plant, and blog its roots.
Water haha. And i don't suggest using tomato juice, we don't want any cannibalistic tomatoes. :)
water
Cranberry Juice Cocktail contains water and sugar and other things. Cranberry Juice is just the Juice of Cranberries
If you need a tomato juice substitute for a vegetable cocktail, you can use half a cup of tomato sauce mixed with half a cup of water to substitute for one cup of tomato juice.
A tomato sauce is cooked and is generally made up of tomatoes together with other ingrdients for example onions, garlic seasonings. Tomato juice is uncooked and is made simply of pureed tomatoes and nothing else except perhaps some added salt. You can't turn the sauce into the juice by adding water though you can turn the tomato juice into a sauce by adding other ingredients and cooking them together
Yes, salt is able to dissolve in tomato juice. When salt is added to tomato juice and stirred, the salt crystals break down into individual ions that disperse throughout the liquid, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
Tomato juice contains the anti oxidant lycopene. Tomato juice also contains carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamin c, and water. The main component of tomato juice is water.
the independent of the tomato plant is the leaf and the dependent variable is the root
No. You have to bathe in tomato juice! YUCK!
A Tomato has 95% water in it.sadly there is on definite answer. it varies for each tomato. this happens because this is no average tomato
According to the 7th grade science book I teach out of - a pure substance can only be an element or a compound. Tomato juice is a mixture of tomato solids and water. It cannot therefore be a pure substance using "science language". However, if I use tomato juice to make chili for example, I certainly want it to be "pure" tomato juice, if you know what I mean.