No, A sugar molecule has hydrogen and oxygen in it, but it is by no means water. It has to be a separate compound to be considered water.
It is a ribose sugar.
It is a ribose sugar.
yes
glucose
Because sugar is a polar molecule, which in other words means it can easily dissolve in polar solvents such as water. Water breaks the bonds between the sugar molecules, it does not break the bonds within the molecule.
the sugar particles turn into ions which attach to the polar molecules of water Each sugar molecule does not become an ion. Each sugar molecule is charge neutral and thus has no charge. When sugar is dissolved in water, the water pulls the sugar molecules apart from each other and the individual sugar molecules no longer touch each other. Each sugar molecule is surrounded by water. The forces between molecules are responsible for this. The polar shape of water molecules is what governs the separation.
Water has a polar molecule.
diffusion
A sugar molecule contains multiple OH groups, which are polar, meaning that one part has a partial positive charge and the other has a partial negative charge. This strongly attracts water molecules, which are also polar. The water molecules then form what is called a hydration shell around the sugar molecule and pull it free of the crystal.
All of them are not. It is the glucose.
The sugar disinigrates and is part of the water
Because sugar is a polar molecule, which in other words means it can easily dissolve in polar solvents such as water. Water breaks the bonds between the sugar molecules, it does not break the bonds within the molecule.