yes
yeah cold water is denser than room temperature (warm) water.
This depends on the density of this item: more denser than water-sink, less denser than water-float.
Juice is much denser than oil. Juice will sink and some what combine with water while oil floats on top of water.
The water of the oceans is denser because of the high level of salt it contains.
Oil floats on water because water is denser than oil.
A coin sinks in water because it is denser than water. The weight of the coin is greater than the buoyant force acting on it, causing it to sink.
No, a copper coin will not float in water because it is denser than water. This means that the weight of the coin is greater than the buoyant force it experiences in water, causing it to sink.
Becuase the coin is heavier then what the water can hold
Coins are denser than water. Styrofoam is less dense than water.
Yes, a coin does sink slightly faster in pure water than it does in sea water. The dissolved salts in sea water make the water denser, and as a result, objects immersed in sea water will experience greater buoyancy than they do in fresh water.
The coin would float.
Vinegar is denser than water because vinegar is made of different substances that are denser than water, so that means vinegar is a little denser than water.
Yes. Obsidian is denser than water.
A coin will float in a liquid denser than itself because of the concept of buoyancy - the upward force exerted by a fluid that opposes the weight of an immersed object. If the buoyant force is greater than the weight of the coin, it will float.
yes chalk is denser then water.
because its less denser than water, a vivid example is a parachute floating on air and a coin falling down.Thomas Aloyce
Salt water is denser than fresh water.