You probably mean the "specific gravity" of crude oil. The answer is yes. For example: crude oil with a specific gravity of less than 1.0 and is therefore lighter than water and will float on its surface. "Extra heavy crude oil" has a specific gravity greater than 1.0 and sinks to the bottom of water.
The specific gravity depends on the particular oil, some are lighter, some heavier. Olive oil has an SG of about 0.7, crude oil (used for gasoline etc.) about 0.9.
it will, unless the specific gravity of the ball is greater that the oil, if it is, it will sink. But I doubt that it is
The same way you convert any density to specific gravity. Just divide the density of the substance (crude oil in this case) by the density of the reference substance (usually water, for liquids).
No. Liquid ether at 72.72 kg/m3 is much lighter than crude oil at 790 (or so) kg/m3.
Yes, palmolein oil is halal and it is the halal certified cooking oil. Any kind of oil is lawful on condition that it doesn't contain pork fat products, or developperd unhealthy breakdown products due to rancidity.
Oil has the highest specific gravity. Water has the second.
Specific gravity of crude oil is how light or heavy it is compared to water. If the API gravity is less than 10 it will float in water.
You probably mean the "specific gravity" of crude oil. The answer is yes. For example: crude oil with a specific gravity of less than 1.0 and is therefore lighter than water and will float on its surface. "Extra heavy crude oil" has a specific gravity greater than 1.0 and sinks to the bottom of water.
light crude oil has less specific gravity,less viscosity while heavy crude oil has more specific gravity & viscosity.
The specific gravity depends on the particular oil, some are lighter, some heavier. Olive oil has an SG of about 0.7, crude oil (used for gasoline etc.) about 0.9.
.890 to .950
Oil with a specific gravity higher than 1.0.
1
Oil is lighter than water due to it's lower specific gravity, specific gravity being the "density" of a fluid relative to water.
0,557 MT/m^3
It is 0.93, approx.