Take a fan and blow the fog away !
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
No. Fluorine is a gas at room temperature a little bit denser than air.
No. If it is denser than air it will stay low to the ground. Crawling makes it more likely that you will breath it in, and that is not good as this unusual fog could be toxic.
EVERYTHING except hydrogen is denser than helium.
because it has layers
Dense fog reduces visibility, even inside a room (although the dense fog that you describe is actually much more likely to form outdoors than indoors).
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
No. Fluorine is a gas at room temperature a little bit denser than air.
No. If it is denser than air it will stay low to the ground. Crawling makes it more likely that you will breath it in, and that is not good as this unusual fog could be toxic.
Walk. To keep noses in clear air.
Water is not denser than any other liquid. Mercury, a liquid at room temperature, has a density of 13.534g/cm3.
At room temperature chlorine is a gas, boron is a solid. So at room temperature boron is much denser than chlorine.
Neon and argon are two other gases that are denser than helium and do not react easily with other elements.
Bromine is denser than air.
Dolomite is denser than that water. Water has a density at room temperature of 0.9 grams repeated or 1.0 grams. Dolomite in a mass of cube is 2.84 grams, so it is denser than water, concluding, that it will sink in water.
Yes. Obsidian is denser than water.
Stainless steel is heavier then aluminium.