Float
Float - The density of water is 1.0, anything with a density less than this will float in water.
That depends entirely on the volume of the object
An object with a density of 1.0g per ml would remain suspended in water, neither sinking nor floating. This is because its density is equal to that of water, so it would experience an equal buoyant force, thus remaining in the same position in water.
The object will either sink, float, or remain suspended in the water depending on its density compared to the density of water. If the object is denser than water, it will sink. If it is less dense, it will float. If the object has a similar density to water, it will remain suspended in the water.
It would sink. The density of water is 1g/mL. Anything with a greater density will sink.
You can determine your buoyancy by observing whether you float, sink, or stay suspended in water. If you float on the water's surface, you have positive buoyancy. If you sink, you have negative buoyancy. When you remain suspended at a certain depth, your buoyancy is neutral.
If the object remains suspended in water, it means that its density is less than that of water. This is because objects with lower density than water will float or remain suspended in water.
If the density of an object is 1, it will neither sink nor float in water. When the density of an object is equal to the density of the fluid it is placed in, it will be neutrally buoyant and will remain suspended in the fluid at the same level.
It would sink. The density of tap water is approximately 1g per ml. Anything with a greater density will sink.
An object that weighs 0.85 grams or ml will float in tap water because the density of tap water is about 1 g/ml. The object is less dense than the water, so it will displace water equal to its weight and float.
Toothpicks float, because toothpick is light and small it is also wood. water has a density of 1. For something to float, the density of the object would have to be under 1, and to sink, it must be over 1. If it is exactly 1, then the object will remain suspended in the water.