(Is that a question? That is a statement.) A gallon is a measure of volume, of how much space the fluid occupies. 1 gallon of milk has the same volume as 1 gallon of Orange Juice. They occupies the same amount of space. Different fluids have different densities. Density is how much mass occupies a given volume. If the density of one fluid is greater, it has more mass, and it weighs more. A gallon is a gallon.
milk then soda then orange juice then water
Milk is a colloids. Fat globules are small enough to keep from settling out. Orange juice is a suspension.
no
it is water as milk and juice has more ingredients
Calcium is calcium. Your body doesn't know or care if it came from milk, orange juice, or chalk however the presence of vitamin D appears to help with absorption.
One gallon weighs 128 ounces one Imperial (UK) gallon weighs 160 ounces A gallon of Orange Juice, milk, water, ketchup, etc will weigh the same
milk then soda then orange juice then water
i think that orange juice is healthier than milk because it has calicium and potassium but has sugar and milk only has calcium and milk has fat Also orange juice has vitamin c but milk does not but if you were to have milk have goats milk because it is healthier
Water as it is less acidic than either milk and orange juice.
no. the plastic milk experiment uses the casein (a protein) in milk. This protein is not present in orange juice.
No, orange juice is not a good substitute for milk. Orange juice has a different acidity (pH) than milk, and does not react in the same way as milk with the baking powder (or baking soda) in the corn bread ingredients.
They don't...
Milk and Orange Juice are similar in there binary chemical compound make up. Basically its equivalent to the Saha is greater then Toni principle. Basically Vince is a scrub who eats orange juice and milk and that's how there alike.
Type your answer here... milk freezes faster because it has less sugar than orange juice does.
it is used in bananas, milk, Orange Juice, and many other things
milk, orange juice
For the same serving size, the milk in my fridge has 510 mg and my orange juice has 430 mg. My milk has slightly more potassium. This may vary from brand to brand, but it seems that milk and orange juice have relatively similar amounts of potassium.