it is easier to float, salt water has a higher density. The more salt, the easier it is to float.
Salt water is more buoyant than fresh water is, because salt water is slightly more dense. -- Anything that floats in salt water will float higher than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that sinks in salt water will sink slower than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that just barely floats in salt water may possibly sink in fresh water.
An egg will sink in water but will float in salt water. An egg will sink faster in hot water than it will in cold water.
I have a marker which float in water.
Ships float in fresh water too. Only a little deeper, since fresh water is less dense than salt water.
i think it is ppeople because they float in salt water and sink in fresh water.
it is easier to float, salt water has a higher density. The more salt, the easier it is to float.
If you just barely float in salt water, you will sink in fresh water.
because of the salt in the water
the salt water is denser because of the salt
Salt water is denser than pure water.
depends on the concentration of salt. The higher the concentration of salt the more likely you are to float.
Salt water is more buoyant than fresh water is, because salt water is slightly more dense. -- Anything that floats in salt water will float higher than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that sinks in salt water will sink slower than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that just barely floats in salt water may possibly sink in fresh water.
A Rock would obviously sink in water and a egg would float in salt water Believe it or not bowling balls that are denser than water float!
An egg will sink in water but will float in salt water. An egg will sink faster in hot water than it will in cold water.
A short piece may be supported by the surface tension of water, but a coil of copper wire would sink.
no< fresh water will become mixed with the salt water