yes you can,there are a number of ways. The simplest way,requiring no special skills or gear is to boil the water in the glass. When all the water has evaporated the salt will remain in the bottom of the glass.
Water vapor does not dissolve in water to form an acid. Water vapor is simply water in its gaseous state, and when it condenses back into liquid water, it remains neutral. Acids are formed by the dissociation of certain compounds in water, like hydrogen ions in hydrochloric acid.
yes, becuse when ice melts it becoms water.Answer:When ice is added to a glass of water the level will rise. After that, as the ice melts the level will decline. When water freezes it expands, so when it thaws back to a liquid it shrinks.
If you dissolve the salt and the sand in water the sand will stay beind and the salt would dissappear. But if you want the salt back you can evaporate it off, by boiling the water. (with the dissolved salt in it)
Yes, you can retrieve the salt from the salt solution by filtering and then evaporating the water. When salt dissolves in water, it separates into its constituent ions, but it does not become chemically altered. By filtering, you can separate any undissolved impurities, and then by evaporating the water, the salt will crystallize back out of the solution.
Put them in water. Sugar dissolves, sand remains Filter the solution to separate sand and salt. Evaporate solution with dissolved salt to get salt back
Try only half a teaspoon dissolved in a glass of water on an empty stomach 2 times a day
water will evaporate and salt and sugar will remain back
a shot of Canadian club whiskey and a glass of water
Ethanol is used because the Aspirin can dissolve into it however when it is then added into the water the aspirin can dissolve so comes back and re appears and as it reappears it comes back purer than before
A glass of ice water is an example of a physical change, where water changes from a liquid to a solid state as it freezes. This change is reversible, as the ice can melt back into water.
Oil does not dissolve in water. It stays there forever and ever. I'm sure everybody has done the shaking of the salad dressing thing, but it still comes back on top. That is the closest oil becomes to dissolving in water :P
Simply drink water from the back of a glass (your mouth reaching of the top of the side of the glass facing you).
You mix a glass of lukewarm water with about a teaspoonful of salt. Hold this mixture in your mouth and allow it to wash around and down to your throat (just tip your head back a little) but DO NOT SWALLOW - if you do, you might vomit it back, at the very least it will be unpleasant, like drinking sea water. Some people think you have to tip your head way back and have your mouth open and make a bubbling sound with your voice. None of this is necessary. Salt is an antiseptic, so gargling with salt water is good for a sore throat
Put the mixture in water. The sugar will dissolve, the glass will sink to the bottom. I would not advise drinking it after though. The glass can be removed by filtration; the sugar can be removed from solution by evaporation.
Yes it can. Prove this to yourself by filling glass with ice and water. Water from the air condenses on the outside. Empty the glass and put it back down without wiping the outside (drops still in place) As the glass returns to room temperature the condensed water evaporates back into the air. Evaporation is the opposite of condensation.
Water forms on the surface of the glass when ice melts due to condensation. As the ice melts, it releases water vapor which comes into contact with the cooler surface of the glass, causing it to condense and form water droplets.
Dissolve it it water and filter it through paper. The sand will be in the paper and then sugar will be dissolved in the water. You can let the water evaporate and you will have the sugar back.