Not unless its shaped like a boat.
(i.e. its density is greater than water)
Depends on what they're dropped into. Water - no. But drop them into something that's denser than aluminium and they will float.
No, a solid steel bar will sink in water because steel is denser than water. Only objects with a lower density than water will float.
Depends on what they're dropped into. Water - no. But drop them into something that's denser than aluminium and they will float.
No, a bar of soap is to heavy to float on anything.
water has more dense than aluminium has got just because its lite and so it'll float
A Snickers bar will most likely sink in water due to its higher density, while a Musketeer bar may float because it is lighter and less dense.
A 3 Musketeers bar floats on water because it is less dense than water. The ingredients in the bar create air pockets or bubbles, which make it less dense and able to float.
It depends on the amount and how tightly packed it is, but it usually should sink(natural)
A bar of soap floats in water because it is less dense than water. The air pockets and ingredients in the soap decrease its overall density, allowing it to float on the surface of the water.
Because the overall density of a can is less than the density of water, a solid aluminium pole has a density greater than water
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.
Eventually, it will. But Aluminium has a great propensity to form a protective film of oxide, and this film is essentially inert. So aluminum may be used for boating or float planes, for example quite safely.