Dissolved substances are things that melt into another liquid and can't be seen anymore.
Imagine you're making a glass of lemonade. You take sugar and drop it into water. At first, you see the sugar grains, but after a little while, they disappear, they've become part of the liquid. That's what happens with dissolved substances: they mix in so well that you can't tell them apart from the liquid anymore.
How It Works
Think of water as a crowd at a party. When you add sugar, it's like adding more guests who all find a spot to stand, they blend right into the group. The water molecules and sugar molecules move around together, making the drink sweet without any visible pieces.
A Real-Life Example
When you make tea or soup, you're dissolving things too! You drop in a teabag or throw in some vegetables, and after a little time, they give their flavor to the water, just like sugar gives its sweetness. The water becomes a new kind of liquid with all the good stuff mixed in.
Examples
- Food coloring spreading through milk
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See also
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- How Does Solutions: Crash Course Chemistry #27 Work?