it looks like little champ.
No, sodium chloride is the solute and water is the solvent in salt water
The solute is the salt.The water is the solvent.The water acts as a solvent to the solute of salt. It forms a solution when the salt has fully dissolved into the water.Get it?
Solution weathering is caused when rocks sit in a pool of saltwater.
Saltwater can seep into groundwater in coastal areas through a process called saltwater intrusion, where the pressure from over-pumping freshwater aquifers creates a gradient that draws saltwater from the ocean into the groundwater. This can also occur when sea levels rise due to climate change, causing saltwater to infiltrate coastal aquifers.
Groundwater can be either saltwater or freshwater, depending on the location. In coastal areas, groundwater can be saltwater due to seawater intrusion. Inland areas typically have freshwater groundwater sources.
saltwater
Saltwater is a mixture of solid and liquid molecules. Once the salt dissolves, the substance becomes a solution.
Neither can dissolve as they are water
A saltwater solution forms when salt is dissolved in water. Solids do not dissolve in gasses, though they can sometimes change from a solid state to a gaseous state in a process known as sublimation. This is not analogous to dissolving.
because copper dissolves in salt.
It dissolves faster in fresh water
When salt and sand are mixed with water, the salt dissolves in the water, forming a saltwater solution, while the sand does not dissolve and remains as a solid. This allows you to separate the sand from the saltwater solution through methods like filtration or evaporation.
A solvent cannot dissolve. You can dissolve a solute in a solvent, e.g. you can dissolve sugar in water - sugar is the solute, and water is the solvent. You cannot dissolve water though.
In a basic saltwater solution, the water molecules would be the solvent and the salt molecules would be the solute.
they change form
You get Saltwater
It dissolves.