A few days ago
♥Roberta.

how is it possiable to float metal paper clips on water?

WHEN METAL IS MORE DENSE THNA WATER?

i don’t get it!

♥Roberta♫

Top 6 Answers
A few days ago
angelsoqt

Favorite Answer

Often what determines whether an object sinks or floats in water is its density. If the object is denser than water, and thus weighs more than the water it displaces when submerged, then it sinks. If it is less dense than water and therefore weighs less than the same amount of water, it floats.

Generally, all metals sink in water because they are denser than water, which means that a quantity of any metal weighs more than the same volume of water. Still, metal objects can be made to float on water. A ship, for example, floats as a result of its shape and the fact that its hollow hull is full of air. These factors reduce the density of the ship as a whole, so that it displaces a huge amount of water relative to its weight.

Some objects will float on water not as a result of human engineering, but because of a property of water called surface tension. Surface tension is a force that results from the attractive forces among the particles of a liquid. Water’s relatively high surface tension is due to the particularly strong bonds that form between the hydrogen atoms in water molecules. These bonds create an attractive force among water molecules, causing them to pull toward each other.

This attractive force acts to minimize the surface area of a quantity of water. It also causes the water surface to resist any attempt to increase its surface area. When a small object is carefully placed on the water surface, gravity begins to pull the object down into the water. The resistance of the water’s surface to this incursion and the expansion it would cause can, however, prevent the object from penetrating the surface, and cause it to continue to float in spite of gravity. Once the object penetrates the surface, however, it sinks because its density is greater than that of water.

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A few days ago
quantumclaustrophobe
Water is composed of two hydrogen atoms at an angle 108 degrees from each other, hooked to an oxygen atom. This makes it negatively charged on one side, and positively charged on the other, and water molecules, because of this, tend to stick together. So the surface of water doesn’t ‘like’ to be broken – it has cohesion, or surface tension.

A needle will also float on the water’s surface, because it’s light enough NOT to break the surface tension & fall through.

In fact, the water molecules stick to each other, and NOT the metal – if you could pick up the needle or paperclip carefully enough off the water – it wouldn’t even be wet.

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A few days ago
charonnisis
It is probably due to the surface area, and the surface tension of the water. It would have to be set flat and slowly, as to not pierce the surface of the water.
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A few days ago
Anonymous
Does it have to do with surface area?
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A few days ago
Anonymous
It has to with surface displacement.
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A few days ago
Ambivalence
Put them in a boat.
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