no
Orange juice is made up mostly of water. So the water in orange juice will evaporate at the same rate as clear water. Of course the parts of the juice that are not water will remain behind. One theory is that the orange juice will absorb more light than water because of its colour.
yes chalk is denser then water.
Well distilliation should allow the alcohol to be removed from the mixture (along with a little water- azeotropic mixture) leaving behind the orange juice- I would try and do it at low temperature (low pressure distillation) rather than at normal atmospheric pressure to avoid "cooking" the orange juice too much and spoiling its flavour and destroying the vitamin C!
Using water is an example, anything that is less dense than water will float on water. Anything that is denser than water will sink in water.
An egg will sink in fresh water. Salt water is denser than fresh water, which allows the egg to float.
Juice is much denser than oil. Juice will sink and some what combine with water while oil floats on top of water.
Water as it is less acidic than either milk and orange juice.
orange juice because it contains more vitamin C than water.
Orange juice is made up mostly of water. So the water in orange juice will evaporate at the same rate as clear water. Of course the parts of the juice that are not water will remain behind. One theory is that the orange juice will absorb more light than water because of its colour.
no
Orange juice
i say no because lemonade is made with water and orange juice isn't
Yes, an orange will sink in salt water because the density of the orange is greater than the density of the salt water. This is due to the higher concentration of salt in the water making it denser than the orange.
You can conclude that the density of an unpeeled orange would be higher than that of water since it sinks in water. This suggests that the orange is denser than water, which is why it displaces water and sinks.
Yes, orange juice will melt ice pretty fast. This is because the acid in the OJ will break down the water in the ice cube.
The specific heat of orange juice (11,2ºBx) is 0.9 Kcal/Kg.Cº (less than pure water)
Yes grape juice is healthier than orange and apple juice