Same as sanitary waters.
yes. the density of a element will not change only the mass and volume will.
No. As long as they're at the same temperature.
No, the density of a rubber stopper is less than the density of water. Rubber has a lower density compared to water, so a rubber stopper would float on water.
If it sinks in water then it has a higher density than water. If it floats on water surface then its density is less than water.
Yes it would. In fact, it IS.Density is a property of the substance, no matter how much or how little of it you have.Whether a droplet or an olympic swimming-pool full, water is water, and has the density of water.
drainage or sewage water are unsanitary water
Yes there is unsanitary water in Africa
If the density of a substance is greater than the density of water, it will sink in water. If the density of a substance is less than the density of water, it will float on water.
Both "insanitary" and "unsanitary" are correct, but "unsanitary" is more commonly used to describe conditions that are not clean or hygienic.
An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.An object will float - on water for example - if its density is less than the density of water. Density = mass / volume.
Eventually, if enough people or animals do that, yes -- of course it can.
yes. the density of a element will not change only the mass and volume will.
The density of water is 1.
The density of water is 1.0
It's actually pretty easy. If the density of the substance is higher than the density of water, the object will sink. If the density of the substance is lower than the density of water, the object will float. Be aware though that various substances may have dissolved into the water, thus changing its density. For example, seawater has a different density than fresh water.
very unsanitary until they created a piping system to transport clean water but the price was high
To calculate the relative density of a substance, you divide the density of the substance by the density of water. The formula is: Relative Density Density of Substance / Density of Water. The relative density is a measure of how dense a substance is compared to water.