When the water starts to crystallize, the freezing pushes out the sugar syrup (which is where the color resides) and that's what accounts for the snow-white water layer and the dark brown sugar-syrup layer.
it turns like the color of the gatorade
Orange
No, Gatorade has a lot of sugar and they color there juice. It is not good to drink at all.
When a person is very active, especially in sports, they will lose electrolytes and fluid. Gatorade helps to replace the electrolytes that are lost. By replacing electrolytes with the sodium that is in Gatorade, endurance is regained as the body is rehydrated.
Gatorade does not cause cancer - the Food and Drug Administration would immediately take it off the market, if it was carcinogenic.
No eye colors are genetics and wouldn't be influenced by dietary habits.
Capsicum will always lose its color when cooked or heated. The idea is to add enough to where it won't lose the desired color in the final product.
Gatorade was developed in the 1960's by researchers at the University of Florida. Researchers were working on a beverage that could replace fluids that athletes lose while playing. They named it Gatorade after the University of Florida's football team the "Gators".
When you are an athlete you lose chloride, sodium, and potassium due to sweating. Gatorade helps hydrate you and replace the electrolytes that are lost. Water does not replace your lost electrolytes. If you drink to much water it disturbs your electrolyte balance.
After exercise, especially after intense exercise, you sweat and lose electrolytes, as well as water. Drinking water plain will replenish and hydrate you, but not replace electrolytes. Drinking Gatorade or another "sports drink" will both hydrate you and replenish electrolytes. However, Gatorade and other sports drinks often contain a lot of sugar and calories, so if you are watching either of those, drink Gatorade in moderation.
general prosessing of gatorade
No. There is no caffeine in Gatorade.