Yes, milk will float on honey. Honey is much denser and heavier than milk. If you drop a spoonful of honey into a glass of milk it will sink to the bottom of the glass.
Surface tension
Most do not. Ask your parents if they have an extra shirt button. If they have one, drop it in a glass of water, and see if it will float. Most will not.
it won't cuz
if it was a cubick foot of water and the glass was the same and weighs less then the water than yes
Float glass was first invented by a company in England called Pilkington Glass.
Cullets doesn't float on water.
normal float glass screen is made of a number of glass sheets which can be standard.
The density of clear float glass, according to Pilkington Ltd., its original manufacturer, is 2.5 g.cm-3.
with a ruler
no
The Pilkington Float process
Float glass (glass formed by allowing it to flatten and cool on a pool of molten tin) is a fairly recent invention. It was developed 1953 and 1957 in Britain. However commercial availability was not attained until 1960.,
to tell the diffence, float both in a glass of water. The jet will float, the heavier, glass, will sink. Also Jet is soft, easily carved but easily damaged.
Yes, milk will float on honey. Honey is much denser and heavier than milk. If you drop a spoonful of honey into a glass of milk it will sink to the bottom of the glass.
Yes, plastic drinking straws will float in water.
Ice is less dense than water and will float on water.