Floats
No, mercury is denser than ethanol, so it will sink and not float.
Arsenic is denser than water, so it will sink in pure water.
Ice will float in ethanol because ethanol has a lower density compared to water. When ice is placed in ethanol, the difference in density causes the ice to be less dense, and therefore float. This is different from water, where the ice is denser than the liquid water and sinks.
Tar is denser than water, so it will sink in water.
Chloroform is denser than water, so it will sink in water.
No, mercury is denser than ethanol, so it will sink and not float.
Ethanol is less dense than water so it will initially float on a water surface. Given that ethanol is totally miscible with water, an ethanol layer on top of a water layer will diffuse into the water while the water will diffuse into the ethanol until a single uniform composition solution of alcohol and water is achieved.
1 kg of water will float in ethanol because ethanol is less dense than water.
it will float as long as it is not fully covered water.
Arsenic is denser than water, so it will sink in pure water.
A fork will sink in water, as it is denser than water. The density of an object determines whether it will sink or float in water.
Asphalt is denser than water and will sink in water rather than float.
float
Float.
Ice will float in ethanol because ice is less dense than ethanol. The density of ice is about 0.92 g/cm3, while the density of ethanol is about 0.79 g/cm3. This difference in density causes ice to float in ethanol.
I have a marker which float in water.
Ice will float in ethanol because ethanol has a lower density compared to water. When ice is placed in ethanol, the difference in density causes the ice to be less dense, and therefore float. This is different from water, where the ice is denser than the liquid water and sinks.