1000 ml of pure water has a density of 1 g/ml, resulting in a mass of 1000 grams. When C grams of salt is added, the total mass increases to 1000 + C grams while the volume remains approximately the same at 1000 ml. Therefore, the density of the water with salt is greater than that of pure water, as density is mass divided by volume, leading to a higher density due to the increased mass.
Because vinegar is more dense than water.
Water becomes dense when it is more saturated than absorbing a solution. For example, salt with make water more dense because as more salt is added, it becomes saturated.
denser, the buoyancy of objects is one way you can tell the water gets less dense.
Anything that sinks in water is more dense than water.
more dense
Seawater is more dense than air. That is why the air rests on top of the seawater and not the other way around.
Water is more dense.
It causes the density to increase because the more salt added to water, the more buoyant or dense it becomes. Salt itself does not evaporate as the water does so as the water evaporates the salt content is effectively increased, therefore making the water more saline or dense.
More Dense.
no, oil is not more dense than water
Water is 784 times more dense than water.
An egg sinks in regular water because it is more dense than water. When salt is added to water, it increases the water's density, making the egg less dense than the saltwater and causing it to float.