When magma coos slowly, it allows large crystals to form. The process of evaporation helps to form crystals.
A supersaturated solution is most likely to form crystals as it cools.
crystals.
Yes, iodized salt can form crystals under the right conditions. When a saturated salt solution is allowed to evaporate slowly, the salt crystals can form as the water evaporates, leaving the salt behind.
Scratching the sides of the beaker provides a rough surface for crystal molecules to attach to, promoting nucleation and crystal growth. The scratches create sites for the crystals to start forming, which helps to speed up the crystallization process and yields larger crystals.
I think (and know) it is because there is less time for crystals to grow.
your so ugly
All rock does not contain mineral crystals. Obsidian, or volcanic glass, in particular is a rock that has cooled so quickly from lava that mineral crystals were not able to form.
Yes. The faster lava cools, the less time crystals have to form. If the lava cools slowly and has a low viscosity, atoms are able to move around more and form larger crystals.
Yes. Salts can form crystals (salt crystals).
a saturated solution will form crystals
When magma coos slowly, it allows large crystals to form. The process of evaporation helps to form crystals.
Gatorade will form crystals faster because it contains electrolytes, which are a form of salt. Salts are crystals, thus your answer. Pure water will not form crystals at all unless it reacts with another substance.
Most minerals form crystals.
Most minerals form crystals.
Table salt is made of many tiny crystals. When you mix these salt crystals with water, they dissolve, losing their crystalline form. When the water evaporates, the salt crystals form once again.
Many inorganic or organic compounds form crystals.