Salt
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Objects with a density less than 1 g/cm3 will float on pure water. This includes most types of wood, plastic, and some metals like aluminum.
Some things float in lemonade but not in pure water because lemonade is denser than water due to the added sugar content. The increased density of lemonade provides more buoyant force, allowing certain objects to float that would sink in pure water.
If an object has a lower density than water, it will float. If an object has a higher density than water, it will sink. This is because objects will displace an amount of water equal to their own weight, and if the weight of the water displaced is greater than the weight of the object, the object will float.
More physics than chemistry, really. Salt makes the water denser, allowing denser objects to float, than in pure water.
Arsenic is denser than water, so it will sink in pure water.
The salted water is denser than pure water and eggs can float.
No, salt water is generally denser than pure water due to the dissolved salt particles increasing the overall mass of the solution. This increased density causes objects to float higher in salt water compared to pure water.
Objects float better in salt water because it is more dense than distilled water. Whether or not an object floats depends on whether or not its overall weight is less than that of the liquid it can displace. To give a clearer picture, imagine pure water is 1 gram per ml. If an object has a density less than 1 gram per ml, then it floats. The salt in salt water makes that density higher. Lets imagine that salt water is 2 grams per ml. An object with a density of 1.5 grams per ml sinks in pure water because it is too dense. However, the same object would float in the more dense salt water.
Yes . Egg float in salt water because salt water is much densier than pure water
Yes . Egg float in salt water because salt water is much densier than pure water
No. (in pure water or minimally diluted water)