If honey and water both are liquid so why do Honey don't move with fast speed as compared to water flow????
plzzzz tell fast... it's of 20pts
BrainofBrainly:
I don't think it is of 20 points but I can answer :)
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Heya.... Empress Here...
Honey and Water are both liquids and its correct but there's a difference.
Honey contains water along with sugar, and sugar when dissolved in water with other nutrients raise its density,making it thick and so it flows slowly and is sticky too.
Whereas water has a lower density than that of honey and appears to flow faster than it :)
Honey and Water are both liquids and its correct but there's a difference.
Honey contains water along with sugar, and sugar when dissolved in water with other nutrients raise its density,making it thick and so it flows slowly and is sticky too.
Whereas water has a lower density than that of honey and appears to flow faster than it :)
Answered by
4
Honey is a mixture of glucose, fructose, water and some other ingredients. This makes them thick and intermolecular force is greater. In addition to intermolecular forces, these sugar units are far more bigger in size than water molecules. Flowing requires the molecules to be able to move past each other. The busy molecules get tangled and have a harder time moving unlike water.
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Hope it helps.... :)
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Hope it helps.... :)
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