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.
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.
It is a mixture!
I squeezed orange juice out of an orange.
The orange juice is not a homogeneous mixture.
Depending on where you purchase your juice and the brand you buy it may not be a pure mixture. If you want to make sure you are only getting the purest ingredients, it is best to make it yourself.
Freshly squeezed orange juice is a mixture, not a compound. It contains water, sugars, acids, vitamins, and various other components from the oranges, each of which retains its individual properties. Unlike a compound, which has a fixed composition and specific chemical properties, the components in orange juice can vary in concentration and can be separated by physical means.
Yes, juice is a mixture because it is made up of multiple substances, such as water, sugar, vitamins, and flavor compounds. These components are not chemically bonded together, allowing them to be separated.
MY orange juice is personally squeezed by ME, so that I can be assured that MY orange juice REALLY IS squeezed from a REAL (California) orange. ***Commercial ventures are trying to squeeze the most profit from their product!
Orange Juice is a solution because you can only see 1 substance
Pure, fresh-squeezed orange juice would be homogenous, because it would be nothing but orange juice and pulp. Store-bought orange juice is typically heterogeneous, as ingredients are typically added... sugar, preservatives, etc.
Chemically, Orange Juice with pulp is a mixture.
It is homogeneous because it looks like one substance, but it really contains water and "orange" concentrate and other things. ~hope this helped