Science, asked by Ashokkumar689, 1 year ago

Seema was making a lemonade she added some sugar and thought that the water level will rise up in the glass but it remained the same why?

Answers

Answered by vms3001
1

Answer:

First, before involving any ingredients, make sure you know the height in the pitcher that liquid reaches, at the target volume of the batch.

Start with the lemon juice in the pitcher. This comes from a bottle or from squeezing lemons. This is the expensive ingredient. The quantity you actually have might come up short, or you might squeeze the last lemon or drain the bottle because it is so close to the end. A little more lemony lemonade is never a problem, if the volume of sugar is the same. You cannot remove sugar or water if the lemon juice is shy of a full batch.

Pour the granulated sugar into the lemon juice and stir to make a smooth slurry, fully dissolving the sugar. If you were to wait until ice cubes and water are added, then some of the sugar may remain a sediment at the bottom of the pitcher.

Next, add ice, based on familiarity with the temperature of the water you plan to add, the temperature of the room and the time before serving. You want the liquid fully chilled by the ice. Adding ice after the water may be limited by the height of the pitcher. And it would dilute the recipe.

Last, add the water to bring the mixture up to the height on the pitcher that is the target volume. The ice that melts will dilute the lemonade, but only to the target proportions of water to other ingredients.

Explanation:

Answered by dearDD
2

Answer:

osmosis

Explanation:

as the sugar can be mixed fully to the water so the sugar is fully dolute to the water

seema had mixed the sugar fully onto the water which has no effect on water

conclusion

= you need to add high weight substances to rise the water level

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