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There is no generic name for such objects but I can give you some specific examples:- Pumice Styrofoam Gases The planet Saturn (which if you could do it would float on water).
no, because some of them is not high ,some of them are low densities.
A natural made rock
Any object will float if its density is less than the density of the fluid,and it'll sink if its density is greater than the density of the fluid.
this is the concept that explains why some objects float on water while others sink. it all deals with density.
It depends on the density of a material. The density can be calculated using: density = mass/volume. This means that a very heavy object like a tanker can float on water because it has a large volume which makes its density less than that of water.
Because some objects are a lot denser than water so the sink and others are less denser so they float
It's far from clear what the actual question is. Some objects float in both salt and fresh water, some objects float in neither, and some objects float in one but not the other. Any object that floats in fresh water will float in salt water, but the reverse is not true.
No, some sink.
The types of objects that will float on water are foil, most rubber, and some plastic.
It is to do with to volume and mass.
Styrofoam
because some objects are much denser(heavier) than water so they sink
Because some objects are heaver than others.
Because of the objects density.
There is no generic name for such objects but I can give you some specific examples:- Pumice Styrofoam Gases The planet Saturn (which if you could do it would float on water).
Because air has weight, mass, and density objects will either sink or float in it. Some balloons will float for example.