1.028 grams per cubic centimeter
Sand and sugar are examples of solutes that will settle at the bottom when mixed with water due to their higher density compared to water.
What are you asking, specifically? If you want to know what you can conclude about each of these liquids, then you could say the liquids at the bottom are denser than the ones towards the top. (I think this is what your asking.) Other than that, I can't really help you here.... Q:which liquid would have the highest density? A: The layer at the bottom of the glass.
Yes, a substance with a density of 5.6 g per cm3 can be used to make a small object that will sit unattached on the bottom of an aquarium if the average density of the object is less than or equal to the density of water (1 g per cm3). This will ensure that the object will float and not sink to the bottom.
Sawdust floats on water due to its low density. Over time, it may absorb some water and become heavier, eventually sinking.
Since the density of ice is less than the density of water, bodies of water freeze from the top to the bottom. This actually provides insulation to the water under the ice, preventing all the water from freezing. This allows life to continue under the ice, provided there is sufficient nutrients. If the density of ice was greater than the density of water, bodies of water would freeze from the bottom to the top, providing no insulation, and allowing all the water to freeze. This environment is not suitable for many life forms.
The Antarctic Bottom Water, North Atlantic Deep Water, and Antarctic Intermediate Water are three density currents that form in polar regions.
Antarctic Bottom Water can only travel north.
Antarctic bottom water of the Southern Ocean is the coldest water on earth. Cold water is always found at the bottom of any combination of water temperatures.
No, it's the Antarctic Bottom Water
Antarctic bottom water is colder than either the Antarctic intermediate water or the Atlantic deep water. The North Atlantic bottom water doesn't flow far enough south to intermix with the Southern Ocean.
When the North Atlantic ocean meets the Antarctic bottom water Hurricanes form(:
Yes, Atlantic deep water is warmer and less dense than the Antarctic bottom water, so it flows on top.
Antarctic Bottom Water
The density of the material is greater than the density of water if it sinks to the bottom of the container when placed in water.
The mechanisms are temperature and circulation.Sea ice concentrates salt. Seas in the Southern Ocean -- the Weddell and the Ross -- freeze over during the Antarctic winter -- and during that process produce polynyas which open surface water to the cold winds that blow off the continent. This freezes the water more quickly and . . . concentrates the minerals.The water becomes laden with salt, and is colder, so it sinks, creating Antarctic bottom water.
The density of the material is greater than the density of water because it sinks to the bottom of the container. Objects with a density greater than that of water will sink in water.
The arrangement of water masses in the southern Atlantic Ocean from the surface to the bottom is Antarctic Intermediate water, north Atlantic deep water, and the Antarctic bottom water. The location where water flow uninterrupted between the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Indian Oceans is in the southern ocean.