Usually aluminum floats because it is also quite light.
You can't make a bar of metal float on water, but boats with metal hulls float. Also, metal bars and other metal objects float on mercury.
Because it is not made entirely of heavy platinum metal etc. It is a very light metal of which it is a very small proportion is metal in the first place.
Metal ships are built to float.
Cesium metal will float on water as its density is lower than that of water, causing it to float.
Your question makes no sense. If stripped down, your question looks like this: "Is metal change?" The answer to this question is obviously "no, but some change is metal, such as pennies or nickels"
No, for a sword is made of metal and metal is heavier than water.
For something to float, it must displace the same amount of water as it weighs. Answer:To float in water, a solid metal object must be lighter than the water equivalent to its volume. This would make lithium (at S.G. 0.53) the only metal that would float in water.Objects which are hollow and made of metal float because the contained volume of the object divided by the weight of the object is less than 1 gm/cm3, the density of water. Solid metal objects can float in liquids which have a density greater than they exhbit thesmelves. As an example, almost all metals will float in mercury
For something to float, it must displace the same amount of water as it weighs. Answer:To float in water, a solid metal object must be lighter than the water equivalent to its volume. This would make lithium (at S.G. 0.53) the only metal that would float in water.Objects which are hollow and made of metal float because the contained volume of the object divided by the weight of the object is less than 1 gm/cm3, the density of water. Solid metal objects can float in liquids which have a density greater than they exhbit thesmelves. As an example, almost all metals will float in Mercury
it will float, with it being a soft metal, try it for yourself
You must displace as much water at the metal weighs. So there is equillibrium between the metal and the water.
It's light enough to float on water
No. To get them to float they must be placed on something light.