Salt
Seawater is denser than freshwater because it contains dissolved salts and minerals, such as sodium and chloride, which add weight to the water molecules. These dissolved substances increase the overall mass of seawater and make it denser than freshwater.
Salt
Seawater is denser than freshwater because it contains salt. The salt in seawater increases the mass of the water without significantly increasing its volume, making it denser. Temperature and pressure can also affect the density of seawater.
the salt makes seawater denser than freshwater. more salt increases the density
sea water is less denser than river water.
Temperature and salinity are the two main factors that influence the density of seawater. Colder seawater is denser than warmer seawater, while seawater with higher salinity is denser than seawater with lower salinity.
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Processes that increase the density of seawater include evaporation and the freezing of seawater into sea ice. Evaporation causes the water volume to decrease while the salinity stays the same, increasing density. Sea ice formation removes freshwater, leaving behind denser saltwater.
The pH of seawater is typically higher than freshwater due to the presence of minerals and salts, which can buffer against changes in acidity. Freshwater bodies are more vulnerable to changes in pH because they lack these buffering compounds. Human activities such as pollution and acid rain can also contribute to fluctuations in freshwater pH.
Technically, neither. They are both the same weight but not exactly weigh anything as water can alter our weight.
Blood is far denser than sea water as it has a whole bunch of cellular bodies mixed in with it. I think you wanted to ask "Which is denser seawater or serum?" In that case serum is still heavier even though it has less salt. Serum still has a wide assortment of exotic proteins dissolved in it.
yes because of the salt