Yes most pebbles will be denser than honey.
no honey is not dense than oil because oil has grease in it which makes it thinner but honey is too thick to be more dense than oil Another Answer: Honey is more dense than water. Water will float on honey. Try it. Is oil is more dense than water. Take some cooking oil and pour it on water. Which floats on the other? If the oil floats on the water then honey is more dense than honey. If the water floats on the oil then you will need to see if the oil floats on the honey or if the honey floats on the oil.
Lead is more dense than air.
No honey is more dense.Honey is a supersaturated liquid, containing more sugar than the water can typically dissolve at ambient temperatures. At room temperature, honey is a supercooled liquid, in which the glucose will precipitate into solid granules. This forms a semisolid solution of precipitated glucose crystals in a solution of fructose and other ingredients.With respect to carbohydrates, honey is mainly fructose (about 38.5%) and glucose (about 31.0%).So, it is about 36% denser than water.
Note that less dense objects will rise above more dense objects. I.E. Helium is denser then our atmosphere so balloons filled with it float. Simply put a cube of ice in a container of water and see if it floats. Also; you can't cant tell density by weight. A massive mountain is more dense then a twig but also a pebble is more dense then a massive log.
Aluminium is more dense than PET.
no honey is not dense than oil because oil has grease in it which makes it thinner but honey is too thick to be more dense than oil Another Answer: Honey is more dense than water. Water will float on honey. Try it. Is oil is more dense than water. Take some cooking oil and pour it on water. Which floats on the other? If the oil floats on the water then honey is more dense than honey. If the water floats on the oil then you will need to see if the oil floats on the honey or if the honey floats on the oil.
Honey and honey are surprisingly the same thing, they are equally dense.
Lots of thing but some examples are corn syrup and honey
Yes, the weight of the object doesn't matter as much as the density. For example, a pebble will sink in water because it is very dense, yet a log won't because it's not as dense as water.
It depends on the size of your spoon and the type of honey. Some honeys are more dense than others. A teaspoon of honey weighs about 5-8 grams. A tablespoon of honey weight about 19-22 grams.
The fees for Msc in Pebble Hills University is more than $6000 for the entire course.
more dense
More Dense.
Milk is a mixture of various milkfats and other things in water. As such, it makes sense that the density of milk is greater than that of water. However, the density of fat is less than water. The density of milk is not fixed and can vary from milk processor to milk processor; form cow to cow. The density of milk is very similar to that of water. Density of water = 1.0 g/mL Density of milk = 1.03 g/mL If you had a kilogram (2.2 lb) of each of them, the volume of milk would be about half a teaspoon more. That is very close to the same density. With a 1000 kg (450 lb) the difference in volume is about 30 litres/liters (~8 gal.).
no, oil is not more dense than water
Lead is more dense than air.
Earth is more dense.