I'm not sure. I'm doing a science project on it. i believe it is from 83-85-87% you can take out. im not quite ure though
Water and salt form a solution in the liquid phase.
Yes, salt water is a liquid liquid solution. It is a homogeneous mixture in which the salt (solute) is dissolved in water (solvent) to form a single-phase liquid.
Liquid!
Salt Water
solid liquid liquid solution
Salt water: 97 percent Ice caps and glaciers: 2 percent Fresh liquid water: 1 percent -Apex- :)
no salt is not a liquid but salt can be dissolved in liquid water which is then called an aqueous solution.
The sea/oceans are full of 'Salt Water', and they are all liquid.
Water and salt form a solution in the liquid phase.
The answer is sucks to suck no cheating .......
Yes, salt water is a liquid liquid solution. It is a homogeneous mixture in which the salt (solute) is dissolved in water (solvent) to form a single-phase liquid.
Approximately 97.5 percent of all the water on Earth is salt water. Of the remaining 2.5 percent that is fresh, about 70 percent exists as ice.
70% of the Earth's surface is covered in salt water. Liquid fresh water covers less than 1% of the Earth
In the world,1% is fresh water,2% ice, and 97% salt water.
solid liquid liquid solution
No.You specifically need liquid water and solid sodium chloride to get salt water.
It is simply salt and water where the salt is dissolved into the water. So yes.