because the wheels in a car are pumped so when they have been brokejust said,they go into a flat therefore the particles escapeso the answer to the question would be particles
An object float in a liquid only when the density of the solid is lower than the density of the liquid.
Density is a physical property of all materials and represents how much mass the material has per unity of volume. If the density is higher than that of water, the material floats. Lower than it sinks.
Yes true, however this is not true of H2O or water. Water in solid form is actually less dense than its liquid form. That is why ice floats on water.
The pressure will get higher quicker than in water because there is a different density between the liquids, and because there is a higher density, the liquid will be heavier and would push on you more than the smaller density of water. if you would submerge deep in that liquid, you will explode at a lower distance from the surface than in water.
no. Density of ice is more than of water...we can understand from ice sinking in water drinks... Edited by Dr.J. : How is it possible for the density of ice to be more (greater) than that of liquid water if ice FLOATS on lakes and rivers? Clearly, the density of ice is LESS than that of liquid water.
This depends on what the material is floating or sinking in. If an object in water that has a higher density than water will sink, but if it has a lower density it will float. For example, water has a density of 1.00 g/mL so if you put something with a density higher than 1 g/mL into it it will sink, but if the material you put in it has a density lower than 1 g/mL it will float.
A material needs a lower density than water to float in water. Ships float in water because their average density is lower than water. The average density includes the steel hull and the air inside the hull.
The floating liquid will have a lower density than the liquid it is floating on.
The floating liquid will have a lower density than the liquid it is floating on.
atoms in a gas are farther apart than atoms in a liquid
Yes, it does depend on the object's density; it depends on the liquid's density, too. An object with a lower density than the liquid it is in will float, while an object with a heavier density than the liquid will sink.
Yes, the density of vapors is lower than the density of the liquid.
A gas has a lower density than either a liquid or solid because its molecules are not as compressed as the other two states of matter. Gas has weaker intermolecular bonds than either a solid or liquid.
Any material that has less density than the liquid on which it is supposed to float.
You think probable to the density, lower than the density of liquid water.
An object float in a liquid only when the density of the solid is lower than the density of the liquid.
Usually, an object can float if it has a lower density than the liquid it is in.