In a beaker put in some marbles and 20ml of water.Using a filter funnel and filter paper let the water soak through the filter paper.
You can take out the marbles by hand since it is a mechanical mixture and then use filter paper to separate the water and flour.
I assume you mean, "How do you separate a mixture of marbles, salt, and water?" The salt will dissolve in the water, but the marbles won't, so you can sieve out the marbles using a colander or screen. Now you are left with salty water. By boiling the water and condensing it (for instance, by using a still), pure water will be obtained. The salt, with its very high boiling point, will be left behind.
If you don't want to collect the pure water, you could also just left the salty water evaporate, and the salt will be left behind.
you sift out the marble fro the sand.. that's it
You put your hand inside the water and take the marbles out yourself
select a proper size of mesh with holes size in between rice size and marble size and sieve the mixture . you will seperate the two as rice fall through and marbles above the mesh.
You can separate it by looking in to it
When you poor water into a jar full of marbles, the water will fill the spaces between the marbles; bubbles will also appear.
Graduated Cylinder - Marbles
With tweezers and a magnifying glass.
no
Mix the salt and powder together in water until the salt dissolves. Pour the mixture through filter paper to separate the powder from the water. Boil the water so it evaporates and leaves the salt behind. If the powder is iron, you can use a magnet to separate them rather than mixing in water.
Separate them by colour
Put them in water.
By using filter paper because the water will go through the filter paper and the flour will stay on top. That is how you separate flour and water.
Put them in water.
One possible way to separate wooden marbles from glass marbles is by using a magnetic field. Since wooden marbles are typically not magnetic, while glass marbles are also not magnetic, one can use a strong magnet to attract and separate the wooden marbles from the glass marbles. The magnet will attract the wooden marbles while the glass marbles will remain unaffected and can be easily sorted out.
For the nails, you can use a magnet. You can separate the marbles and corks by putting it in water, wood floats and marbles don't.
stirr the mixture around in water, until the sugar dissolves, then take the flour out, and let the water evaporate out of the sugar-water mixture ??
Either: 1) Find the radius of each marble and thus their volume through V = 4/3 x pi x r^3 and then add the volumes up. or 2) Put all the marbles in a measuring jug and fill it up to the top. Pour the water into a separate container and empty the marbles out of the jug. Pour the water back into the jug. Thus: Volume of water with marbles - volume of water without the marbles = volume of marbles
If you use a flour sieve, you can separate flour and water.
Pour into a sieve or colander, the sand will pass through the open mesh, leaving the larger marbles trapped inside the sieve.
It depends on what is in the mixture. If it's cake batter with flour, sugar, salt, butter, etc. then yeh it's basically impossible. But if it's a mixture of marbles and sand then you can easily separate those.
Because you can separate seashells and marbles with your hands and you can't with copper sulfate