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No a quarter cant float in water. If you want you could try it yourself!
it floats because salt has chemicals so it can float like in the beach it's salt water right,so that's how you could float in the beach.
There are several ways.It could be made of one of the metals that actually do float on water: lithium, sodium, and potassiumIt could be formed into a shape that spreads the weight around so much that the water will support it, such as a boat.
I have a marker which float in water.
The density of sea water is greater the fresh water. The more greater density the larger is its upward thrust.
This could be caused by over-feeding. Fish have air bladders and they control how they float in water. If they eat to much this may damage the bladder and in return cause them to float abnormal.
Objects float higher in salt water due the density caused by the salt, the more salt present in the water the higher the object will float.
No a quarter cant float in water. If you want you could try it yourself!
A planet's weight does not determine whether it can float in water. It's density is what determines that. Your question should be "Which planet's density is so small that it could float in water?"
No it is to heavy
no
no
If you could find a body of water large enough to fit Saturn, yes it could float in the water. The density of Saturn is at 0.687 g/cm³.
The old beetle could float but the new ones will not.
It is easier to float because the sea water is denser than water found in a swimming pool. This is caused by the salt in the oceans.
A rock could float if its density is less than that of water, as is the rock pumice, or if it is shaped in a manner that would displace an amount of water to sufficiently cause it to float when carefully placed in water.
it floats because salt has chemicals so it can float like in the beach it's salt water right,so that's how you could float in the beach.