I'm sorry i don't know what aluminum is but if you mean aluminium then its simply a denser material made of denser elements! wood being made of its carbon based materials and other composites but aluminium is, well aluminium much lower but higher numbers on the Periodic Table! (well i think this is it >.<)
I'm sorry i don't know what aluminum is but if you mean aluminium then its simply a denser material made of denser elements! wood being made of its carbon based materials and other composites but aluminium is, well aluminium much lower but higher numbers on the Periodic Table! (well i think this is it >.<)
no, because when on experimented on pouring water on a beaker, then you put the aluminum and of course it sink which means aluminum is denser than water.
Rocks are denser than dirt, and dirt is denser than water
because a pebble is denser than water thus making it sink oil is not denser than water.
Gold is heavier than aluminum because it is denser: at the atomic level, its atoms both weigh more and are able to pack closer together. The end result is that gold is about 7 times denser (and thus, that much heavier) than the same amount of aluminum.
The mantle contains more iron, making it denser.the mantle contains more magnesium and less aluminum than the crust .this make sthe mantle denser than the crust.
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.
Stainless steel is heavier then aluminium.
Depends on what they're dropped into. Water - no. But drop them into something that's denser than aluminium and they will float.
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. Obsidian is denser than water.
yes chalk is denser then water.
Most types of wood are not denser than water--they float in/on water. For the wood types that are denser than water, the explanation is that they contain molecules that are denser than water (e.g. resin) and the average distance between molecules is smaller.
shampoo is denser than water or mix cornstarch and water and that is denser than water too.
A thin aluminum foil, (which is denser than water) could float on the surface if carefully placed, by virtue of the surface tension of water. But if submerged, the foil would sink due to its higher density. Generally speaking, a denser substance will sink in a less dense substance. Assuming standard temperatures, since aluminum has a density of about 2.7 grams per cubic centimeter and water only has 1 gram per cc, aluminum would sink. (An aluminum boat would float because it displaces a greater mass of water than its own weight.)
Salt water is denser than fresh water.
Denser water sinks.
Yes if it floats. Does Marble float in water? If not then the answer is no.
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.