That depends on the liquid and the solid. Liquid mercury has a very high density. Liquid gasoline has a very low density. At the melting point the density of a liquid and a solid are almost the same.
The liquid have density.
The floating liquid will have a lower density than the liquid it is floating on.
The density of the liquid is equal to the weight of the liquid divided by the volume.
Buoyant force is directly proportional to the density of the liquid. as the density of the liquid increases, the Buoyant force increases.
no, the lightest liquid has a lot more density than the heaviest gas.
Lithium is the lightest metal, Potassium is the second lightest -- density about 0.86 kg/L
generally, you can look at the Periodic Table of Elements. hydrogen is the lightest of both
With a density of 0,534 g/cm3 lithium is the lightest between metals.
no
helium
No, mercury has a very high density.
That depends on the liquid and the solid. Liquid mercury has a very high density. Liquid gasoline has a very low density. At the melting point the density of a liquid and a solid are almost the same.
This is the determination of the specific density (the ratio liquid density/water density).
A very spectacularly lightened liquid for of material.
That depends on the liquid and the solid. Coal is a solid with a very low density. Mercury is a liquid with a very high density.
The mass of the liquid divided by its volume is its density.