Only if it is less dense than the liquid silver, yes. However if both densities of the silver cube and the liquid silver are equal, or the same as each other. Then the silver cube will stay where ever you leave it in the liquid silver.
Ice cubes are less dense than liquid water, which is why they float.
Liquid silver is melted silver. Sometimes the colloidal silver is also called liquid silver.
It would sink, solids are more dense than liquids almost always. water is one exception.
A platinum cube will be worth a lot more than a silver cube of the same size, and the platinum cube will weigh a lot more (more than twice).
An ice cube is frozen water, which is a solid.
it's a solid
sink
in water or anything which is denser than ice
Ice cubes are less dense than liquid water, which is why they float.
it depends what the cube is made out of it depends what the cube is made out of
A cube of platinum of the same size as a cube of silver will weigh more.
Yes. In the case of isotopes of water. An H2O ice cube is shown to float in a beaker of liquid water, while an ice cube of D2O (heavy water) is shown to sink in liquid water.
The cube has a larger volume.
Yes the boat will float on liquid soap
yes!
A chunk of ice will float higher in water than an ice cube only if the ice chunk is larger than the ice cube.
The number of ping pong balls needed to get a steel cube to float would depend on the mass of the steel cube.