Filter the saline solution through a cloth to remove the sand grains. Distil the water from the saline solution, leaving the salt crystals behind. Condense the water vapour back into liquid water.
Because there is a greater volume of water in beaker B, the beaker would have to be heated for a longer period of time to reach the same temperature as beaker A. If your desire is to have both beakers warmed to the same temperature at the same time, beaker B would require the addition of more heat (because there is more water inside it).
If you left water in an open container for several days in summer, the water would eventually evaporate and there would be less water than you put before but if you put in in winter, the water would eventually freeze.
I'm assuming you're talking about osmosis. If osmosis didn't occur, then the saltwater salmon couldn't adapt to freshwater and would suffer from a lack of water and too much salt in the cells, and the freshwater salmon would have too much water and not enough salt in it's cells. The saltwater salmon would shrivel up in freshwater, and the freshwater salmon would burst in saltwater.
Boiling off the water from a salt solution will separate the solid salt and water (which can be collected by a condenser).
Density Column to Separate Mixtures of SolidsYou could use a density column to separate mixtures of different solids by adding substances that have different densities. Then you would add in the solids, which would land or stop at a substance.
For example, evaporation can be used to separate saltwater and sugar and water.
saltwater
No, oil and water in a beaker would not be classified as a solution. Oil and water are immiscible, meaning they do not mix together to form a homogeneous solution. Instead, they separate into distinct layers due to differences in polarity.
Simple collect the water gas and cool it using a condenser in a condensing tube which will cause the water to return to liquid state and collect it in a beaker
When you pored it into the beaker it would be there. It has to be added by some process. Using the faucet or another container with water in it would be the simplest manner.
it would be the same
There would be 1100 ml of water in the beaker now.
In a basic saltwater solution, the water molecules would be the solvent and the salt molecules would be the solute.
because the water in the beaker would evaoprate into it then condense on the surface of the syringe
Well, darling, a 250 mL beaker filled with 100 mL of water would have a mass of approximately 100 grams. Water has a density of 1 g/mL, so 100 mL would weigh 100 grams. The beaker itself doesn't add any weight, unless you're counting the weight of your expectations.
Drown you, then eat you.
Because there is a greater volume of water in beaker B, the beaker would have to be heated for a longer period of time to reach the same temperature as beaker A. If your desire is to have both beakers warmed to the same temperature at the same time, beaker B would require the addition of more heat (because there is more water inside it).