Theoretically, if you were to physically go to the Sun and pour a bucket of salt water on the Sun, the bucket of water would simply evaporate, along with you can the bucket itself. However some may say the Sun is a giant nuclear reactor. If you were to input a salt water compound large enough to withstand the heat of the Sun (which is improbably to say the least), the hydrogen and oxygen atoms would split apart from each other. Both the oxygen and hydrogen would then serve as fuel for the Sun to keep on happily burning bright. Since the water is not there anymore (it was split into hydrogen and oxygen), the salt would solidify and most likely melt and disintegrate.
2nd version
I think the question just meant: "What would happen if you put salt water somewhere warm and not in the shade?"
Salt dissolved in water forms a solution. A solution is a homogeneous mixture where the solute (salt) is evenly distributed in the solvent (water) at a molecular level. Each component retains its properties and can be separated through physical means.
When NaCl (salt) is added to carbonated water, the salt dissolves into its ions (Na+ and Cl-) without any significant reaction with the carbonation (CO2). The salt simply dissolves in the water, adding a salty taste.
Bromine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Chlorine is an additive that you put in a pool to sanitize the water. Salt is added to some pools to allow it to be converted electronically to chlorine with a salt water chlorinator.
you put teaspoon of seasalt and put in a clear cup. string to pencil. then put 120 cc of water in and stir sea salt and water together. wait until disolved and balance pencil and string in middle of the clear cup and repeat expererment 2 more times -Makayla 11, Ohio
No. The reason ice melts when you put salt on it is the freezing point of salted water is much lower than the freezing point of unsalted water. If you put salt on the ice, the salt will work its way into the ice. The temperature of ice with salt on it is higher than the freezing point of salted water, so it accomplishes a phase transformation from the solid state to the liquid state. That's what a physicist would call it in her laboratory. If it happens in her driveway early some morning, she thinks "now that the ice has melted, I can drive to work without killing myself." If you put flour in water, you make pancake batter—which freezes at about the same temperature as water. So it won't melt ice at all.
It would die.
it will die
me dont know
It would expand and then explode. sorry Explode :P
it would swell and finally burst apart.
Bromine is salt mixed with water so when you put it in water its just more water with salt in :)
They would die because fress waterfish are meant for fresh water not salt water
the cell would regulate and the outer and inner liquid would become the same
It expands. Get bigger over a period of time.
Water would rush in, causing the cells to burst.
It would die. It is generally a salt water mammal and that is a fresh water lake. It could be killed by the boat traffic.
If human blood is put in salt water, the water molecules in the human blood will lead to the lower concentration of water molecules. This process is called diffusion- water molecules going from high concentration to low concentration.