No.
Polar compounds are dissolved better in water.
Not much, really. A trip to Mars would most likely be lauched when it and Earth are relatively close to each other. At that point, the two planets are separated by about 4 million miles of empty space. You'd be lucky if you encountered more than dust particles.
No! That would kill the plant. Water is essential for the plant to live.
you would get tastier, better food. plants would die
Thick leaves would generally do better in dry conditions as they help to conserve water through reduced transpiration. Thin leaves are better suited for wet environments as they facilitate faster water uptake and are less prone to waterlogging issues.
Water rockets use water and air modern rockets use thrust and oxygen.
Water rockets need fins because the rocket needs to stay in balance....without fins on a water rocket, the water rocket would be going out of control because it is not in balance!
Yes, the NASA website even has tutorials for how to build water rockets with body tubes.
No they cannot. Why do you think that they're called 'dirt rockets'
A seed would grow better in water i did a science project on it.
Less water more air
air and water
It would grow better in water than soil because it would obsorbe the exact amount of water it needs.
Newton's third law
No, gas would be better. Gas can be used in many productive machines. The efficiency ratio of Work to pollution is better for gas than water.
Umm water or water? I would say water.
No.