Yes much more denser than sponge.
Yes, clay is denser than sponge. Clay is a natural mineral material that is compact and heavy, while sponge is a lightweight, porous material that is less dense.
No.
Sponge is porous and filled with air, which makes it less dense than water, so it floats. Rubber is denser than water and does not have air pockets, causing it to sink.
A clay ball sinks in water because it is denser than water, causing it to displace water equal to its weight. The ball's density is higher than the density of water, resulting in a downward force greater than the buoyant force pushing it up. This imbalance causes the clay ball to sink to the bottom of the water.
No, metal bolts are denser than water so they will sink rather than float.
Light passes slower through mediums that are denser than air, such as water or glass. This decrease in speed is due to the increased interactions the light particles have with the molecules in the denser medium.
Even though a sponge may be the same size as a book, the sponge has hundreds of holes in it. The book has far more material in the same amount of space that the sponge takes up. In other words, the book is far more dense than the sponge.
Sponge is porous and filled with air, which makes it less dense than water, so it floats. Rubber is denser than water and does not have air pockets, causing it to sink.
Think of a clay body like a sponge. When the sponge is wet it swells up and when a pressure is applied to the sponge, water is forced out and the sponge shrinks. Consolidation is the term used to describe this phenomenon in clays. Normaly, the pressure applied to clays is due to the overburden pressure, or weight of the overlying clays bearing down on the strata. Therefore a normally consolidated clay is one that becomes more dense - that is more consolidated and tightly packed - as you go deeper into the strata. Over consolidated clays occur when at some stage during the history of the deposit, other earth pressures have been applied resulting in more water being squeezed out than would normally be expected. This causes the clay to become more densely packed in and as such is over consolidated. Over time, more clay is deposited over this layer resulting in normally consolidated clay over a denser layer of over consolidated clay... pheeeew, this is the best I can explain it with out making you sick with an intense geotechnical filibuster. Rohan
No, the clay will still be denser than the water. You are spreading it out over a larger area, and the clay will not be heavy enough to break the surface tension of the larger area of water. So, the answer is surface tension keeps it from sinking.
A brick is a hard, solid building material made from clay or concrete, while a sponge is a soft, porous material used for cleaning or absorbing liquids. Bricks are typically heavy and durable, while sponges are lightweight and flexible.
Bromine is denser than air.
A clay ball sinks in water because it is denser than water, causing it to displace water equal to its weight. The ball's density is higher than the density of water, resulting in a downward force greater than the buoyant force pushing it up. This imbalance causes the clay ball to sink to the bottom of the water.
Yes. Obsidian is denser than water.
Stainless steel is heavier then aluminium.
SPONGE(say it loud) .... sponge (softer)
Yes. Cold air is denser than warm air and thus the troposphere is denser in the winter than in the summer.
Vinegar is denser than water because vinegar is made of different substances that are denser than water, so that means vinegar is a little denser than water.
Yes, the Earth is much denser than our sun.