Olive oil is not denser than water. This can be verified by placing olive oil and water together and observing how olive oil stays on top of the water, proving itself to be lessdense.
Because cooking oil floats on top of water it is therefore less dense. Water is denser because it sinks to the bottom. :) Hope this answered your question.
Milk is alot more dense than oil. I learned it in 1st grade science last year.
no
FALSE-apex
yes
yes cooking oil is denser than water
what i think is oil is denser because denser mean mass which is heavy and that is why the oil goes on the bottom when you add oil with water
Juice is much denser than oil. Juice will sink and some what combine with water while oil floats on top of water.
Oil floats on water because water is denser than oil.
because a pebble is denser than water thus making it sink oil is not denser than water.
yes
yes , because oil is less denser than water
No, water has more density than oil. If something denser than water(Eg=Iron) is dropped to water, it sinks, while less denser will float. Oil floats on water. Really I've tested it
It dosent, waters density is lower then cooking oil, resulting in cooking oil floating on water
No, in general most oils are LESS dense than water.
No, it is more dense than water and cooking oil.
Oil has a density of about 0.8 - 0.9. Mouthwash (which is naminly water) has a density of about 1. So no, mouthwash is denser.