yes water can increase the density of water as wood has the power to absorb water and so the density of water is drastically increased
No. It doesn't matter how heavy a block of wood is, it depends on the density of the wood. Generally wood floats as the density of wood is lighter than the density of the water, so it would float.
iron is more dense then water and wood is less dense then water. iron sinks because it is heavier then the density of water. wood sinks because woods density is lighter then the density of water.
pine wood?
Depends entirely upon the wood. Some woods sink in water. Density of alcohol is 0.789.
.83 g/ml
water has the affect on wood that the water is absorbed into the wood sometimes changing the shape or density
the density of water is higher than the density of wood... & so an iron piece sinks & a ton of wood floats...
Wood has a lower density than water, and thus the upward buoyant force provided by the water is equal to the weight of the wood submerged. The density of wood less than water, all things are less than water density can float on the water
Wood has a lower density than water, and thus the upward buoyant force provided by the water is equal to the weight of the wood submerged. The density of wood less than water, all things are less than water density can float on the water
If the density of wood is 2g per CCm does it float in water?
Yes, water density will affect an object's ability to float.
No. It doesn't matter how heavy a block of wood is, it depends on the density of the wood. Generally wood floats as the density of wood is lighter than the density of the water, so it would float.
Wood mostly floats in water because it has a lower density than water. it is NOT lighter than water, it is LESS DENSE. water has a density of 1.0 g/cm cubed. that means wood usually has a density of .99 or less. But, not all wood floats, keep that in mind
The density of ultrapure water is not affected.
snow can affect wood because snow turns into water and when water gets on wood it warp.
It depends on the relative density of the wood versus the water. In general, yes.
-- The aggregate density of the wood block is 700/1000 = 0.7 the density of water. -- So, as soon as the wood has displaced 0.7 of its volume in water, it has displaced its entire weight in water, and floats. -- The wood floats with 0.7 of its volume below the surface and 0.3 of its volume above it.