Yes, milk will float on honey. Honey is much denser and heavier than milk. If you drop a spoonful of honey into a glass of milk it will sink to the bottom of the glass.
Yes. Most wood can float on honey. However, petrified wood most likely would not float on honey.
Some objects that float on milk are coins, cork, small plastic toys, and seeds like sesame seeds or chia seeds.
Although you might think milk fats would likely float on water, milk also contains other solids like proteins and sugars, which make it barely heavier than water. So usually no - at the same temperature and pressure, ordinary homogenized cow milk would sink in water. A gallon of milk is heavier than a gallon of water.
Honey has a lower viscosity than milk because it is a concentrated sugar solution, whereas milk is a mixture of water, proteins, fats, and sugars. Honey has a thicker consistency due to its high sugar content, which results in a higher viscosity compared to milk.
Honey is denser than most other liquids, such as water or milk. This means that honey is heavier for its size compared to these liquids.
It depends if the carton is full or not. If the carton is empty, then it will float. If their is milk in the container, then it won't float.
Yes. Most wood can float on honey. However, petrified wood most likely would not float on honey.
float
Float. (They are less dense than milk)
yea they do float yo! yea they do float yo!
Milk.
Yes, and also honey may be dissolved in milk.
Yes. Hot milk is good with honey. Drinking hot milk with honey will help sooth a sore throat.
yes
The fats (i.e. cream) from the milk will dissolve in the gasoline and the the resulting gasoline/cream solution will float on the water from the milk.
The milk sweetens and will taste honey-ish
density of cream is lighter than milk