water weighs more than Crude Oil
You probably mean the "specific gravity" of crude oil. The answer is yes. For example: crude oil with a specific gravity of less than 1.0 and is therefore lighter than water and will float on its surface. "Extra heavy crude oil" has a specific gravity greater than 1.0 and sinks to the bottom of water.
The density of the human body is greater than that of water. This means that when you step into water, the water you displace has a weight equal to your weight. If you weigh more than the weight of the water that you displace, you will sink.
A scuba diver needs more weight in the ocean than in fresh water because salt water is denser than fresh water, making it more buoyant. The additional weight helps the diver sink and maintain a neutral buoyancy underwater.
It is more dense than water, and [presumably] it is not shaped in such a way that all of its weight can be displaced before the stone submerges.
Water takes up more than half of the body weight.
It will weigh more because the total weight would be the sum of the person's weight and the weight of the water in the barrel.
because it dosent mix together and water has more weight so water is more dense than oil
because upthrust force in case of honey is more than water.
Comparative: More crude Superlative: Most crude 'Cruder' and 'crudest' are perfectly acceptable, and indeed more idiomatic than 'more crude' and 'most crude'.
Specific gravity of crude oil is how light or heavy it is compared to water. If the API gravity is less than 10 it will float in water.
Objects that float displace more water than objects that sink because the buoyant force acting on the floating object is equal to the weight of the water displaced. This means the weight of the floating object is less than the weight of the water it displaces, causing it to rise and push out more water. Objects that sink do not displace as much water because their weight is greater than the weight of the water they could displace.
Yes