no as it normally sinks down when put in water
it has a smaller mass
due to higher intensityof heavy stone than a lighter stone
due to higher intensityof heavy stone than a lighter stone
The stone is heavier than the same volume of water. In short the density of the stone is more than the water. So the stone does not float on the water.
something lighter than water
pumice or any other low density rock
No. A stone is about 6.4 times heavier than a kilogram.
it is lighter than water.
it has a smaller mass
i think mangoes aren't lighter than water
because the upthrust force of the water acting on the stone was pushing the stone upwards meaning it was acting against the downwards weight of the stone (its weight). This meant that the downwards force was decreased and therefore felt lighter :)
Yes, Frozen water is 9% Lighter than actual water .
depends if the plastic is heavier or lighter than water and if its hold air which is lighter than water
The Romans developed concrete as a building material that was lighter than stone in some cases. They had different weights of concretes.
due to higher intensityof heavy stone than a lighter stone
Something has neutral bouyancy if it stays in the water wherever you put it, only if it has the same density as the water - there is no cause for it to float or sink than the volume of water it has displaced. If its density is more, as for a stone, it must be heavier than that so it sinks. For wood, it is lighter so water from above drops down as the wood rises.
salted water