Yes sugar will sink in water and eventually dissolve.
well, sugar is more dense than water. Therefore, sugar will sink to the bottom until it's dissolved into a substance. (:
Sugar sinks in water because it is denser than water. Sugar crystals are heavier than water molecules, causing them to sink to the bottom rather than float on the surface.
Calamansi seeds have a lower density than sugar water, causing them to float. In ordinary water, the density of the seeds is greater than that of the water, causing them to sink.
Sodas sink due to their density, which is influenced by their sugar content. When sugar is dissolved in water, it increases the liquid's density compared to pure water. As a result, sodas, which contain high levels of sugar or high fructose corn syrup, are denser than pure water, causing them to sink when placed in it.
Yes. Sugar is denser (than water) and therefore will sink to the bottom, whereas gum without sugar doesn't have the "Extra Density."
For an object to float it must be less dense than the water/liquid that it's in. Adding sugar to water lowers its density because glucose molecules (sugar molecules) are less dense than water molecules. Therefore, putting an object into sugar water will make it sink.
Orange seeds float in sugar water because the sugar increases the water's density, allowing the seeds to float. In ordinary water, the seeds sink due to their own density being greater than that of the water.
When sugar is added to water, the density of the water increases because sugar molecules take up space in between water molecules, making the overall solution denser. This higher density causes objects to sink because they are less buoyant in the denser sugar water compared to regular water.
Sugar sinks in water because it heavier and more dense than water. Artificial sweeteners like Aspartame are not as dense and will float.
Sugar water is denser than plain water. A saturated solution -- it will not absorb one more gram of sugar -- is about 1.83 grams per milliter. Whole milk's density is 1.034 grams per milliliter. Thus a full jug of milk (assuming a thin plastic jug, not a heavy glass container, and no air in the jug) would float on sugar water. How far it would sink depends on the concentration of the sugar solution.
no it doesnt because it has lots of mass which makes in sink.
figure it out you stupid