No. Ice and water are the same substance (they're both water); the only difference is the state of matter the two are in. Milk and coffee are different substances and they're in the same state of matter.
milk scientifically a Solid
Solids are the most dense state of matter
Milk is normally a liquid(a suspension of cream droplets in water), by freezing it milk changes from a liquid to a solid. This is a physical change, the substance is still milk, however it is no longer a liquid, it has changed into a solid.
Liquids are a state of matter with definite volume but no definite shape. Examples of liquids include water, milk, oil, and juice. Liquids can flow and take the shape of their container.
No, milk and gasoline are not examples of the same state of matter. Milk is a liquid, while gasoline is a volatile liquid.
No. Ice and water are the same substance (they're both water); the only difference is the state of matter the two are in. Milk and coffee are different substances and they're in the same state of matter.
it is actually a colloid, some more examples are paint whipcream milk mud and even glue. a colloid is when one state of matter is suspended within another
No. Milk is a mixture no matter where you get it from.
Milk... Milk ...milk...
because it is a liquid so it is matter
milk scientifically a Solid
Milk is a liquid.
no
The dry matter is the remaining substance after the removal of water. Dry matter in milk is composed of butterfat, proteins, minerals and lactose.
chocolate milk
Milk