No, not in water. Gold is very dense. However, if you found a liquid that is more dense than gold, at a temperature that would not melt the gold, then the gold would indeed float in it.
No. Ice cubes will sink in pure alcohol, and will float lower in low-proof alcoholic beverages. This is because alcohol is less dense than ice.
water
Yes. For every fluid, there are things that float in it ... they just have to be things that are less dense than the fluid. That's how stones float in mercury, logs float in water, and hot balloons float in air.
Three of the most commonly known alcohols, methanol, ethanol, and isopropanol have densities around .79 g/ml. In order for something to float on alcohol, it would have to have a lower density than that.
No.Lead has a very high density and will not float in alcohol
no it does not float
Alcohol is flammable - so do not try it
Silicon (Si) doesn't float on water.
Ethyl alcohol has a specific gravity of 0.78, so it will float on water (1). Olive oil is 0.703 so it will float on ethyl alcohol.
No, gold is heavy
The alcohol content of Goldschlager is 43.5% or 87 proof. Originally the alcohol content was 53.5% or 107 proof. It is a liquer with tiny flakes of gold that float within the liquid, but which only measure up to 13mg per litre.
No. Ice cubes will sink in pure alcohol, and will float lower in low-proof alcoholic beverages. This is because alcohol is less dense than ice.
No, not in water. Gold is very dense. However, if you found a liquid that is more dense than gold, at a temperature that would not melt the gold, then the gold would indeed float in it.
not that i know
no
no because it dissolves together