Yes, ice will float in water because ice is less dense than water, you can think about how an iceberg floats in the ocean too.
no but they do in salt
No. The two will actually mix readily
yes
it's because the vinegar has a density greater than that of the egg..... (*_*)
Oil floats atop vinegar because of the density difference. Oil is the lesser dense. its the same thing with water and oil.
There are tents designed to Float in water. But not all tents designed to float.
Soil floats on water!
As heptane is lighter than water, it will float.
No. Oil will float on vinegar as vinegar has the same density as water.
Any object with a density lower than 1 g/cm3.
The bubbles from the carbon dioxide reaction help you float
no it willl explode
it's because the vinegar has a density greater than that of the egg..... (*_*)
no you do not. But you can. A drop of vinegar helps!
The vinegar will disintegrate the egg shell and the salt will suck out all the water and shrivel the egg.
oil is not soluble in vinegar as vinegar has a polar attraction just like water.
If the density of an object is less then the vinegar then it will float, if it's density is greater then the object will not,ex: cork is much less dense then water, so it floats on top of water
Oil floats atop vinegar because of the density difference. Oil is the lesser dense. its the same thing with water and oil.
take some raisins and drop it into a glass then fill it with clear vinegar and watch it go up then down.
yes , it's like a popping bubbles , just like vinegar and talc.