No, salt water is denser.
Sea salt and table salt are made of the same chemical compound. They have the same density. Sea salt is slightly less refined than table salt and may contained more minerals.
Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water
Fresh water (of the same temperature) has the lower density ('lighter').
Objects that contain a higher density that water will sink, but if the same object has a lower density that saltwater, then it will float in salt water. And this also depends on the concentration of sodium ions present in the salt water. As the concentration of the sodium ions increase, the density of the salt water increases.
That depends entirely on the liquid. If you are mixing salt into water, then yes. But only if you mix in enough. Fresh water has a density of 1.0, while saltwater has a density of 1.025. The more salt, the higher the density. Since the egg's density stays the same, you should get it to float if you mix in enough salt.
Sea salt and table salt are made of the same chemical compound. They have the same density. Sea salt is slightly less refined than table salt and may contained more minerals.
No salt has a greater density.
Salt will increase the density of water at the same temperatures.
pure water has the same density, and the same mass
No, it depends on the volume of water that can dissolve the salt. If the volume of water is more then it dissolves more salt and the density will be more and if the volume of the water is less then it dissolves less salt and the density will be less.
density is the word used to describe how much is in a certain place e.g. 100ml of salt water has a higher density than the same amount of pure H2O because the salt water has both H2O and NaCl (salt) squashed into the same amount of space therefore everything has density if however if you meant mass or weight the answer would also be yes
Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water Sea water and fresh water does not have the same density because sea water has salt, which makes it more dense than fresh water
Density = Mass/Volume As salt(mass) increases and the volume remains the same, density also increases.
A mixture is simply various compound mixed together. Vary the amount of one compound in the mixture and the properties, such as density, can be changed. For example, salt and water can be combined to make a mixture of salt water. If more salt is added the density of the mixture increases. If you add more water, then the density decreases. While pure salt, a compound, will always have the same density because it is governed by forces at the atomic level, not simply the amount of sodium and chlorine that is combined.
The density of something does not depend on the amount of the substance you have, the density of 1 gram of water is the same as the density of 100000000 grams of water. The density of pure water at standard temperature and pressure is 1.
The density increases as the mass of the solution increases but its volume remains the same.
yeah.....it does change when you add some liquid to it......