You'd be fine on Mars, as long as your habitat is properly sealed.
In the open without a space suit, you'd suffocate for lack of air, and your body would freeze; or more precisely, "freeze-dry", because the atmospheric pressure is only a couple of percent of Earth's, and the temperature is almost always near or below freezing.
Float up.
It would freeze and become brittle, and shatter into small pieces if dropped onto a hard surface
Something that will float in water.
It separates something that floats from something doesn't float.
Anything that has a density that is lower than water will float. The lower something's density is, the more buoyancy it will have.
Float up.
A person living underwater would die. But, people do float.
we would eventully float to far from the sun and everything would freeze.
The first person to exist - He/She would have realised that they did not float off into space.
If ice did not float seas and lakes would freeze from the bottom up. There would be no free water. No free water would mean no life. No life would include you.
Saturn would float in a bathtub because it has the lowest density of all the planets. If something has very low density, it floats. Thus explaining why Saturn would float
If something has a lower density than the substance it is in it will float.
It would freeze and become brittle, and shatter into small pieces if dropped onto a hard surface
Technically no. You see, if the density of the person sitting on top of the sack of apples were less than the density of water, than it would float, i dount that this would actually be the case. Also it would be able to float if the sack of apples were one of those floating devises used in the water. lol
About 15.
nothing much it would just float more than normal
would they float on ease