More dense.
Vinegar, it's less dense. Vinegar, it's less dense.
If its less it floats on the surface of the liquid. If its more it will sink to the bottom.
objects that are less dense float to the top.
Diffusion is more rapid in less dense medias. Molecules have more open space that way and can move faster and more freely.
Ice cream is less dense than ice
Objects which are less dense than water will float. Objects denser than water will float or sink depending on the volume of water that they displace and that will depend on their shape.
Gauge its buoyancy. Put it in the water. objects that are less dense will float while objects that are more dense sink.
Gauge its buoyancy. Put it in the water. objects that are less dense will float while objects that are more dense sink.
Vinegar, it's less dense. Vinegar, it's less dense.
Density. Objects that are more dense than other less dense objects will sink below them. This is how floating works, as well.
If its less it floats on the surface of the liquid. If its more it will sink to the bottom.
Objects that float in water are less dense than water; while objects that sink in water are more dense than water.
The density of water is 1 g/cm cubed, and objects more dense that water will sink, while objects less dense than water will float. An object will sink if it weighs more than the water it pushes away, and an object will float if it weighs less than the water it pushes away. The Greek mathematician Archimedes discovered that the amount of water displaced by an object depends on the mass of that object. Mass is the amount of matter in a substance, and dense objects have more mass than less dense objects. Dense objects that do not displace much water will sink, while less dense objects that displace a lot of water will float.
They float.
Objects that are less dense than the environment in which they are immersed will float, unless they are tethered.
objects that are less dense float to the top.
The density of water is 1 g/cm cubed, and objects more dense that water will sink, while objects less dense than water will float. An object will sink if it weighs more than the water it pushes away, and an object will float if it weighs less than the water it pushes away. The Greek mathematician Archimedes discovered that the amount of water displaced by an object depends on the mass of that object. Mass is the amount of matter in a substance, and dense objects have more mass than less dense objects. Dense objects that do not displace much water will sink, while less dense objects that displace a lot of water will float.