precipitate can be of any color and depends upon the complex formed in precipitation.
Types of evidence for chemical change include: A gas is evolved. A precipitate appears or disappears. Heat may be evolved or absorbed. A color change occurs. A substance disappears.
It is called a precipitate. If that is the type of answer you are looking for.
It would be called a precipitation reaction. The left over solid is called a PRECIPITATE
1. releasing of heat 2. change of color 3. bubbling 4. change of smell 5. precipitation
it could be a precipitate or a colloid I would think it is a precipitate
The color of lead II chloride precipitate is white.
Silver chloride precipitate is white in color.
Cu3(PO4)2 - Copper II phosphate
Iron precipitate can vary in color depending on the oxidation state of the iron. It can appear as orange, brown, or red in color.
Silver bromide (AgBr) is a light yellowish precipitate.
Magnesium carbonate precipitate is white in color.
The precipitate formed when sodium carbonate and calcium chloride dihydrate are mixed is white in color. This white precipitate is calcium carbonate, which is insoluble in water.
baluga ka...:P :P :P
The color of the precipitate formed when copper(II) hydroxide decomposes to copper(II) oxide is black. When heated, the greenish-blue copper(II) hydroxide decomposes into black copper(II) oxide, which is the color of the precipitate.
Silver chloride (AgCl) gives a white precipitate. Silver Bromide (AgBr) also gives a white precipitate, though it's a slightly more creamy white than the precipitate formed by AgCl. Silver iodide (AgI) gives a pale yellow precipitate.
the precipitate is calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and its white in color
change in color, formation of gas and precipitate ;))