Butter could stick in something like maple or regular syrup.
after atoms and molecules of gases and liquids are heated, they sink?
Some liquids are denser than water, causing them to sink. This is because they have more mass per unit volume than water, so they displace less water and sink to the bottom.
Some liquids sink in other liquids due to differences in density. When a liquid is denser than the liquid it is placed in, it will sink because of gravity. This is similar to how some objects sink or float in water based on their density compared to the water.
Because peanut butter has such a thick consistency, it will not spray out of an aerosol spray can. Only thin liquids can do that.
Yes, it would actually float. While less liquids sink right to the bottom
Convection
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The more-dense liquid will sink because it's more dense and this is the lowest-energy state. If both are polar or both are nonpolar, some mixing will occur, but the effect can still be seen.
water, blood, oil, molten butter, molten metals, ...
Higher dense liquids sink to the bottom. Liquid with lower densities go on top.
Probably because it draws/absorbs the heat making the heat "sink" into it
Convective mixing.