pyroclastic cloud
Velocity (speed and direction) Wavelength (frequency)
less dense
No. Oils are highly viscous, yet relativly non-dense, while water is fairly dense, while being relativly non-viscous.
Black Holes are the most dense. Second to black holes would be Neutron Stars
Measure the mass and volume of both to determine each's density (mass/volume). If the object is less dense; it will float, if it is mroe dense; it will sink.
A black hole is more dense. In principle, the black hole exists all at one point. So its volume is zero, and its density is infinite.
No. It gets less dense
Dense volume. Obviously.
The source of its gravity is its mass. Black holes also have the property of being very dense. Black holes by definition are objects where the escape velocity is equal to or greater than the speed of light.
The mass remains the same, the star becomes more and more dense as the volume decreases
its has more pressure
A synonym for the word "dense" is the word mass or the word volume
Heat it!
Velocity (speed and direction) Wavelength (frequency)
less dense
No. Oils are highly viscous, yet relativly non-dense, while water is fairly dense, while being relativly non-viscous.
Black Holes are the most dense. Second to black holes would be Neutron Stars