No. the density of platinum is 21.456 g/ml, which is much higher than the 1 g/ml density of water.
This depends what you put it in. If you put platinum in water it will sink. Water has a density of 1 g/mLwhereas platinum has a density of about 21 g/mL. Substances that are more dense than the liquid it is submerged in will sink.
The Latin name for platinum is "Platinum." Its chemical symbol is Pt, and it has an atomic number of 78.
The normal phase for platinum is solid. At room temperature, platinum is a solid.
Platinum is rarely found on its own, but in combination with other base and precious metals. Extraction of the pure metal from ores is a complex process, and includes milling the ore, a froth floatation process, and smelting at high temperatures. This removes base metals, notably iron and sulfur, and concentrates PGM- platinum group metals- gold, platinum and palladium. The PGM matte is further processed by electrolysis to remove nickel, copper and cobalt. The high grade concentrate is treated by solvent extraction, distilling, and ion exchange treatment to separate the PGMs into its separate metals.
The elemental symbol for Platinum is Pt.
No, a piece of platinum will not float on gasoline. Platinum is a dense metal with a high specific gravity, which means it will sink in liquids that are less dense than itself, such as gasoline. Since platinum is significantly denser than gasoline, it will submerge rather than float.
This depends what you put it in. If you put platinum in water it will sink. Water has a density of 1 g/mLwhereas platinum has a density of about 21 g/mL. Substances that are more dense than the liquid it is submerged in will sink.
I dont think there is one
If you are in a physics class, the answer is to float it in water and determine its density. In real life, take it to a jewelry store.
platinum
No, platinum will not sink in mercury because platinum is denser than mercury. Platinum has a density of 21.45 g/cm³, whereas mercury has a density of 13.53 g/cm³. Objects sink in fluids when their density is greater than that of the fluid, so platinum would actually float on the surface of mercury.
the three lake Pokemon will tell you where to move them by which way they float
Because it is not made entirely of heavy platinum metal etc. It is a very light metal of which it is a very small proportion is metal in the first place.
it will float as long as it is not fully covered water.
float dawg, float
Most materials will float in Mercury because it is so dense. A lump of Lead will float in a bath of Mercury. The well-known metals Gold, Platinum, Tungsten, Uranium and Plutonium are more dense than mercury and would sink. More specifically, any material having a density less than 13593 Kg/m3 will float in a bath of Mercury.
they do not float