No, it is more dense than water and cooking oil.
No, water will float on top of glycerin because water is less dense than glycerin.
Water and juice are essentially the same. The juice has more parts per million in it, so it would be the most dense. Cooking oil is less dense than water, which is why it floats to the top of the water.
Dense water sinks in comparison to less dense water.
no
Ice is less dense than water
A wooden block can be less dense than water.
no beacause a rubber duck floats and if an object floats in water, is is less dense than the water if it sinks it is more dense
If more dense, it will sink when put into water; if less dense it floats.
Chlorine gas is less dense than water, so it will float on top of water if the two are in contact.
Oil IS already less dense than water.
Easy, put a fruit in water and if it floats it is less dense than water.
No. Ice is less dense than water. Because ice is less dense it displaces less water and floats. Water is most dense at 4o C. any change in temperature, either up or down, lowers the density.