It will sink :-)
the outside liquid is not dangerous as it is just water but the liquid inside the glass floating balls are highly dangerous and toxic, and can contain acidic and corrosive liquids. if one of the liquids looks metal looking it will most likely be mercury which is a dangerous liquid.
well.... basely you really can use anything if you want to doesn't not matter but it matters what you put in there really all about the stuff you put in there
No. One can not transform one element into another. However Mercury may be used to extract gold from gold containing sand. The gold will dissolve in the mercury which can then be boiled away to leave the gold. This will APPEAR to make mercury change into gold but this is not the case, you have to put the gold into the mercury first.PLEASE NOTE - Mercury is VERY VERY toxic/poisonous and using it to extract gold this way is dangerous to the environment and harmful to the people doing it (especially the boiling away mercury phase) - do not refine gold this way, use a mechanical separation process.
liquid. think of what you put into your car.
steel will float in mercury
They would float on the surface of the Mercury but they wouldn't react with the Mercury.
They'll get wet
The ancient method of getting liquid mercury in to solid is like this. They will put the solid thing by subjecting it in a high temperature. As temperature arises mercury would rise too. And they will collect it. But it is too dangerous. They might be poisoned.
You will pass out
You would burn and feel immense pain. Liquid iron is very hot.
The solid chocolate will melt and become a liquid if heated.
First of all, if the water is frozen, then you can't put an ice cube into it. Secondly, if you put an ice cube in liquid then froze it then it would become part of the liquid that froze.
if a meteorologist says that the air pressure is getting lower what you expect to see happen to Torricelli's mercury barometer
Mercury is an element. It will form compounds; mercuric chloride, mercuric sulfate and (of course) mercury fluoride. It becomes a solution if you put it in concentrated nitric acid.
We get a plano-concave liquid lens held in between the two. Using this technique we find the refractive index of the liquid by getting newton's rings.
The element mercury is a liquid at room temperature not a solid. So it would be difficult to use is as an ornament unless you put the mercury in something. The freezing point of mercury is approximately -38oF so you couldn't really use it as a solid anyway. Yes, mercury is toxic, very toxic, so you shouldn't really handle the stuff at all.