The density to tap water will vary with its temperature and the additives to the pure water. There is a table of densities of pure water vs. tap water atwww.simetric.co.uk/si_water.html. Note, however, that the latter does not list the composition of the tap water. Normally encountered pressures do not affect the density of pure or tap water significantly.
1 g/ml
No, distilled water is distilled water.
Distilled water is not a base.
Sea water is the densest among river water, distilled water, tap water, and sea water. This is due to the higher concentration of salt and minerals in sea water, which increases its density compared to the others.
You should not drink distilled water as it lacks minerals which are beneficial for us.Make a solution of the salt in distilled water.
Distilled water is neutral
The abbreviation for distilled water is H2O.
Water (distilled or not) is a chemical compound - H2O.
distilled! :D
mineral water contains salts. Distilled water does not contain any salts, it's just water. And bottled water comes in a bottle. As a "food" item I expect it has to pass food safety standards, but otherwise it could be anything. Mineral water is water that has had minerals dissolved into it as a result of being stored underground. Spring water is mineral water for example. Depending on where the mineral water has come from effects the mineral content of the water. Distilled water on the other hand has been distilled. That mean it has been turned into steam, then the steam is allowed to cool turning it back into water in a clean container. What happens as a result is that only the water turns into steam leaving the mineral content behind giving you pure water with no mineral content.
Specific gravity is the ratio of density of material to the density of water, so when we use Kerosin instead of water then the value will be multiplied by the specific gravity of kerosin to get the actual specific gravity.
Distilled water is clearly labelled as such.