All the types of water and generally all the fluids (gas, liquid, solution) cause buoyancy.
Yes, it depends on the make up of its molecules. For example oil drops float on water due to its make up.
In salt water the water is more dense but in regular water the water isn't as dense so it couldn't float an object higher than salt water.More specifically, an object that floats in a liquid exactly displaces an amount of liquid having the same mass as the object. This is called bouyancy. Since the density (mass per volume) of salt water is greater than that of fresh water, an object will displace less volume, i.e. float higher in the salt water, than it would in fresh water.
Bouyancy is what makes a boat float
no, water is a liquid (regular water), solid (ice), and a gas (water vapor).
Liquid nitrogen can cause water to freeze instantly when pumped into it. Liquid nitrogen has a very low temperature of -320°F (-196°C), causing the water to freeze rapidly upon contact.
liquid, cause its in the ocean rivers lakes etc
It can float, in a given quantity of the (liquid at room temperature metal) mercury. This is because mercury is denser than any pebble, stone, likely to be found on earth surface. Floating is the condition or state of bouyancy in a liquid. So a stone is to mercury as a cork is to water.
Water first covert from liquid to gaseous state. It then precipitate as snow(solid) or rain(liquid).
ummm idkk
it is different cause water is a liquid and ice is a solid
It depends on how much water, how hot it is, and how much liquid nitrogen there is. The water will initially cause the liquid nitrogen to boil; if there's enough water and it's hot enough, it may make the nitrogen boil explosively. However, if there's enough nitrogen, it will eventually freeze the water.
No, a water gun is not designed to handle or shoot liquid nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen is extremely cold and can cause serious injury if not handled properly. It is not safe to try to shoot liquid nitrogen from a water gun.