Nothing dude. Just yucky water
When you drop most things in water the object sinks and the water rises.
To make a zirconium sulfate solution, dissolve zirconium sulfate powder in water. The concentration of the solution can vary depending on the desired application. It is important to stir the solution well to ensure that the zirconium sulfate is fully dissolved.
When acetic acid reacts with zirconium hydroxide, it forms zirconium acetate and water. The reaction between these two compounds results in the formation of a salt and water as byproduct.
No, zirconium oxide does not dissolve in water because it is a highly insoluble compound. Its strong ionic bonds prevent it from dissociating in water, making it practically insoluble in this solvent.
Zirconium is not soluble in water in normal conditions; a very low solubility is possible at very high temperatures and pressures.
Zirconium fluoride (ZrF4) is nearly insoluble, but Zirconium sulfate (Zr(SO4)2.4H2O) is fairly soluble.
When you put a drop of food coloring into a glass of water, the water will turn that color.
The stone gets wet.
The floor becomes wet. The water gets evaporated after a while.
they fall back to Earth
I think you would precipitate the zirconium as a zirconium hydroxide, Zr(OH)4, and make 2 moles of ammonia chloride, NH4CL. ZrOCl2 + NH3 + 3H2O --> 2NH4Cl + Zr(OH)4 This is a common sol-gel reaction.
When you drop one drop of water on waxed paper, the water will bead up and form a circular shape due to the hydrophobic properties of the wax. This occurs because the wax repels the water, preventing it from spreading out or being absorbed into the paper.