Fresh water at a temperature of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 999.70 kilograms per cubic meter or 0.9997 grams per cubic centimeter. Sea water with a salinity of 3.5 percent at a temperature of 10 degrees Celsius has a density of 1026.98 kilograms per cubic meter or 1.02698 grams per cubic centimeter.
Salt
no, because the density is denser than salinity.
The density increases as the mass of the solution increases but its volume remains the same.
The density of water does not change based on the amount of salt dissolved in it. The density of pure water at room temperature is approximately 1 g/cm^3.
Yes, the density of water increases as salt is dissolved in it. This is because the salt adds mass to the water without significantly changing its volume. The increase in density allows objects to float more easily in saltwater compared to freshwater.
No salt has a greater density.
The density of pure salt is 2,165 g/cm3.
In aspect of egg floated in salt water is no, egg didn't change it's density just salted water is more dense. In the aspect of salted egg (marinaded in salted water for a week) is yes. Diffused salt content would increase the density of the egg.
The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
I do not know but you can divide mass by volume and get the density. --------------------------------------------- The density of a pure salt crystal is 2,165 g/cm3. This is a true density. The density of fine powdered salt (apparent density) is variable: approx. 1 g/cm3.
Salt water has a higher density than the egg.
This density depends on: - temperature - concentration of the salt