Salt water and Fresh water are chemically identical (H20) with the difference being that salt water has sodium chloride (NaCl or common household salt), an ionic compound made from 1 positively charged sodium ion and 1 negatively charged chlorine ion, in solution (disolved into it)
The salt disolved by the relatively strong hydrogen bonds in water, attracting the charged ions and pulling them out of a solid state. These hydrogen bonds give water some of its "special properties" such as stickyness, wetness and being a liquid at room temperature, Big exciting things for chemists.
It is this presence of Ions that allow salt water to conduct electricity as the ions can carry charge through water, which completely pure water cannot do.
Pure water also has a lower freezing temperature than Salt water as the hydrogen bonds in "fresh water" are attracted to other H20 molecules rather than the ions in solution.
Pure water has a water potential of 0, salt water is less than this.
Salt water is also salty, Fresh water isn't.
the difference between salt water and fresh water is that salt water is from the ocean and fresh water is water that hasn't gotten to the ocean and so the water is clean, And you can only drink fresh water not salt water
The lowest areas of salinity in an ocean are near where fresh water rivers empty into them. This is because the influx of fresh water creates an area of lower salinity compared to the remainder of the ocean.
Inland ponds (ie, not near the ocean) are normally fresh water, and are formed either by precipitation (rain, snow, etc.) or by underground, or artesian water sources. Large ponds of this type are often called kettle lakes, in that they have no visible source of water supplying them, such as a river or stream. Ponds can also be formed by receding ocean tides and, in this case, will contain salt water. Of course, when the tide rises again, the pond will simply become part of the ocean, so these ponds are not permanent but exist only when the tide is out.
Freshwater Biomes, Estuary Biomes, and Marine Biomes
Fresh water can be found in various locations on Earth, including rivers, lakes, and groundwater reservoirs such as aquifers. Rivers are bodies of flowing fresh water that typically originate from springs or melting snow. Lakes are large bodies of standing fresh water that can be natural or man-made. Groundwater reservoirs, such as aquifers, are underground layers of permeable rock or sediment that store and transmit fresh water.
they are both H2O...
because fresh water is good
they can if the ocean is fresh water
The Pacific Ocean is salty, there is no fresh water in it.
fresh water doesnt have saltinity in it but, ocean water does.
The ocean is salt water.
There are fresh water lakes
Ocean water has a higher salinity than fresh water.
Only about 10 of the water that evaporates from a salty ocean is fresh water.
ocean water, because it is saltier.
no there is not
the difference between salt water and fresh water is that salt water is from the ocean and fresh water is water that hasn't gotten to the ocean and so the water is clean, And you can only drink fresh water not salt water