Pure tap water is water having only some infinitesimal impurities.
Have you a blue tap water in your bath ?
A blue liquid can be classified as a heterogeneous mixture, a solution, or a pure substance depending on its composition. If the blue color comes from a uniform distribution of a dye in a solvent, it is likely a homogeneous solution. If the blue color results from suspended particles or separate phases, it would be a heterogeneous mixture. If the liquid is a single chemical compound that is blue in color, then it would be considered a pure substance.
A homogeneous dough is one that has uniform consistency and composition throughout. This means that all the ingredients in the dough are evenly distributed, resulting in a smooth and cohesive mixture. Achieving a homogeneous dough is important in baking to ensure even rising, texture, and flavor in the final product.
Blue cheese dressing is considered heterogeneous because it is a mixture of various ingredients that do not fully blend together to form a uniform solution. The chunks of blue cheese and other components like herbs and spices give it a non-uniform appearance and texture.
Sapphire, Lapis lazuli, Chalcedony (dark blue), and Indicolite.
Typically, dark colored food coloring, such as red or blue, will color a white flower the quickest due to their intensity and concentration. It is recommended to dilute the food coloring in water before placing the flower in the colored water to prevent damage to the flower.
homogeneous mixture called solution
water in ocean or sea is colored blue because of the replection of the blue sky... water is colorless...
I originally thought that the atmosphere was a homogeneous mixture, but then I found out that it's actually heterogeneous for this reason: when you look up into the atmosphere, what do you see? Generally, you see blue, which is the ozone layer (O3) and clouds, which are suspended droplets of water, a separate layer from the other gases. So, the atmosphere is a heterogeneous mixture. However, air on the ground level that is all around you is homogeneous, as you cannot make out the different gases that it composes of.
Dunk it in molten wax before you put it in the blue water.
It entirely depends on what the blue solid is! If it's copper sulfate, the solid dissolves. If it's lapis lazuli, the solid sinks to the bottom. If it's small pieces of blue fibreglass, it will probably float.
Dogs will drink colored water. I tried out an experiment on my Pit Bull Terrior. She drank red, green, purple and blue water.
A blue liquid can be classified as a heterogeneous mixture, a solution, or a pure substance depending on its composition. If the blue color comes from a uniform distribution of a dye in a solvent, it is likely a homogeneous solution. If the blue color results from suspended particles or separate phases, it would be a heterogeneous mixture. If the liquid is a single chemical compound that is blue in color, then it would be considered a pure substance.
The salt doesn't exactly "react" with water, but is dissolved by the water, or is solvated by the water. The salt ionizes into its constituent parts (ions) and these are then surrounded by water molecules. For copper sulfate, the equation is simply CuSO4 ---> Cu^2+ + SO4^2-
ten min.
It is a mixture.
When you mix food coloring and water to make it blue, you create a solution. In this case, the food coloring dissolves completely in the water, resulting in a homogeneous mixture where the particles are evenly distributed at the molecular level. A suspension, on the other hand, would involve larger particles that do not dissolve and can settle out over time.
H3Yit is amixture gas like helium ad hydrogen