No. Oils are highly viscous, yet relativly non-dense, while water is fairly dense, while being relativly non-viscous.
Higher the viscosity then velocity gradient would be higher. Velocity gradient is the ratio of change of velocity to the distance between the layers of the liquid
Fluid behavior is related to both density and viscosity. By using the kinematic and dynamic viscosity of a fluid, the density can be calculated.
Both are indirectly related through temperature. When temperature increases both viscosity and density increases.
The viscosity of the liquid will increase.
denser liquids tend to have more viscosity
You can not. Density is a property based on the mass and volume of the fluid, while viscosity is a derived property based on the fluids shear and strain.
Fluid behavior is related to both density and viscosity. By using the kinematic and dynamic viscosity of a fluid, the density can be calculated.
Both are indirectly related through temperature. When temperature increases both viscosity and density increases.
It is the ratio of the dynamic viscosity to the density of the fluid.
I suppose that you think to the density, viscosity, refractive index, radiation absorption etc.
The viscosity of the liquid will increase.
- the grain size of the suspended particles - the concentration of the suspended particles - the density of the suspended particles - the nature of the liquid (density, viscosity)
denser liquids tend to have more viscosity
they are two truly different concepts. The density is a measurement of the molecular weight of the composition. In simpler words, density = number of molecules x molecular weight/volume occupied, while the viscosity is a measurement of the inter-molecular forces and molecule shapes. Viscosity tells you the "friction" between two layers of the given fluid, while density varies slightly with temperature, viscosity changes rapidly. Both density and viscosity decreases with temperature, but viscosity mostly has an exponential relationship with temperature. Density holds a linear relationship. This temperature viscosity relationship is the base of the auto lubricant technology. Viscosity and density are two different physical phenomena depending on totally different aspects. The common misconception of "heavier fluids are more viscos" is to be omitted.
Rate of flow any liquids is called viscosity... Viscosity depends on the density...
denser liquids tend to have more viscosity
For ex. density, viscosity.
You can not. Density is a property based on the mass and volume of the fluid, while viscosity is a derived property based on the fluids shear and strain.