No. It will sink because ice is denser than ether, and denser things sink to the bottom. Ice has a density of 0.9167 g/ml and ether has a density of 0.736 g/ml.
Water is a polar liquid; ether is not.
The lipid glycerol is soluble in both water and ether. Olive oil is soluble in ether, but not water. A solid lipid is insoluble in water, methanol, and ether.
Ether has a greater cooling effect than water when smeared on your hands because of its evaporation method. Ether gets its energy from your hands. So when it evaporates, the cooling effect is greater than water.
Ether is a gas and so the molecules are more spread out, making it less dense than water, whose molecules are so close together that water cannot be compressed.
Jeremejevite does not float on water.
The ether precipitates when the reaction mixture is poured into water because ether is less soluble in water compared to alcohol. Therefore, when the reaction mixture contains ether and alcohol is mixed with water, the ether separates out and forms a separate layer due to its low solubility in water.
In ether. However the difference is not so significant. The solubility of the commercially sold sample (%100 pure) in water is reported as 1g/65 ml. and in ether as 1g/78 ml. They account for 15.4 g/L water and 12.8 g/L ether. You can check out such properties of materials here:
Water molecules are held together by hydrogen bonds which are relatively strong. Ether molecules do not have such intermolecular forces holding molecules together. Therefore, it is easier for ether molecules to escape as a vapor, and this is why the vapor pressure of ether is greater than that of water.
That depends on the relative densities of the solid and the liquid. If the solid is denser than the liquid, the solid will sink. If the liquid is denser, the solid will float.
Yes, water can float on water. This is because of surface tension, which allows objects with a lower density than water to float on its surface. Items like boats or water bugs can float because of this phenomenon.
fish does float on water!