Saturn
Saturn will float in ocean as it has least density of 0.70 gm/cm^3..
Saturn. It is the only planet in the solar system that is less dense than water.
Saturn is not very dense... or solid. It is a giant ball of gas. Water is more dense that Saturn, therefore, Saturn would float on water. ________________ More specifically, the density of Saturn is 0.69, where water is 1.0. So if Saturn were a solid (which it is not), it would float. Saturn is by far the least dense of all the planets; even Uranus at 1.32 and Jupiter at 1.33 are more dense than water is. Earth is the MOST dense planet at 5.52, edging out Mercury at 5.43 and Venus at 5.24 in average density.
That would be Saturn, since it lacks in density it would be light enough to float in an ocean big enough for it.
No. It may be denser than the ocean, but nowhere near dense enough.
Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Saturn is less dense than water, so it would float in a hypothetical ocean. However, it's very unlikely to find an ocean to put it in, even in other solar systems. Anything that big probably wouldn't be a planet - it would be a brown dwarf or a full-fledged star. Stars and dwarfs don't have anything we would call oceans.
they do not float on any thing
yes they do if u put enough air into them but they don't work in the deep or shallow parts of the ocean or sea
a ocean because the salt water makes you float and a pool water doesn't.
Amazingly enough, scientists who have travelled to the bottom of the ocean have found lakes of super-saline water! This water is so supersaturated that they could not get their submarine to even sink in it. If you would like to know more. It is featured in the "Blue Planet" series that is on Discovery Channel. http://dsc.discovery.com/tv/blue-planet/blue-planet.html http://dsc.discovery.com/tv/blue-planet/about/about.html
The density of the planet Saturn is less than ' 1 '. If some kind of enormous ocean of water existed somewhere, Saturn could float in it. Even though Saturn has quite a fair amount of mass.
yes