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Water, aka H2O
Hydrogen.
Yes. It floats on water
Of course. Fresh water floats on salt water, warmer water floats on cooler water, and ice floats on any water.
Water has many unique properties that enabled life to evolve on Earth. The one that is unique is that it expands when it freezes, thus lowering its density. This means that ice floats on water. It is the only compound or element where the solid form floats on the liquid form.
It is less dense than water, therefore it floats on water.
When potassium reacts with water the potassium burns a bright purple light, a gas is given off with a hissing noise and the potassium rockets around the surface of the water because it floats.
kerosene floats on water because kerosene is less denser than water
the density of water is higher than the density of wood... & so an iron piece sinks & a ton of wood floats...
Record how high the foam floats in water.
freeze water as ice cubes then put it on water and it floats Liquid fresh water floats on salt water Warm water floats on cold water (water's greatest density is when it is 4 degrees Celsius).
The reason why ice will float in water is because ice is not as dense as water, therefore, it floats.