Floating And Sinking
Simple Machines And Floating: Floating And Sinking
Floating And Sinking
Floating And Sinking
What you'll learn
- Objects that are less dense than water (lighter for their size) tend to float, like dry wood, ice, and plastic foam.
- Objects that are denser than water (heavier for their size) tend to sink, like an iron nail, a stone, or a coin.
- Ice floats on liquid water because ice is slightly less dense than liquid water.
- The shape of an object matters too — a lump of solid iron sinks, but the same iron shaped like a hollow ship floats because it pushes aside (displaces) a large amount of water.
- Adding salt to water increases the water's density, so some objects (like an egg) that sink in fresh water can float in very salty water.
Key concepts
Level 1 - Core idea
Verbal: Whether an object floats or sinks depends on how dense it is compared to water. Materials less dense than water float, denser ones sink, and even a dense material like iron can float if shaped hollow, like a ship.
Symbolic: less dense than water -> floats; denser than water -> sinks; hollow shape -> can float even dense materials
Visual: Drop a solid iron nail into a bowl of water and it sinks, but a hollow iron or steel ship of the same metal floats on the sea.
Level 2 - NCERT anchor
NCERT Looking Around 5 connects this to simple home experiments of dropping objects like wood, stones, and coins into water to observe floating and sinking.
Worked example
A solid iron nail sinks in water, but a huge iron and steel ship floats on the sea. How is this possible?
Step 1 - Solid iron is denser than water, so a solid lump of it sinks.
Step 2 - A ship is built hollow, holding a large volume of air inside its shape.
Step 3 - This hollow shape makes the ship, as a whole, light for its very large size.
Answer: The ship's hollow shape lets it float even though solid iron itself sinks.
Why does an ice cube float on top of a glass of liquid water instead of sinking?
Step 1 - Ice and liquid water are both made of the same substance, water.
Step 2 - Ice is slightly less dense than liquid water.
Step 3 - Being less dense means the ice cube is lighter for its size than the water around it.
Answer: The ice cube floats because it is less dense than liquid water.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Thinking only the material decides floating or sinking | Ignoring the role of shape | Both the material's density and the object's shape together decide floating or sinking |
| Thinking heavier objects always sink no matter the shape | Overlooking how hollow shapes change the outcome | A heavy material shaped hollow, like a ship, can still float by displacing enough water |
| Thinking ice is denser than liquid water since it feels hard | Confusing hardness with density | Ice is actually less dense than liquid water, which is why it floats |
| Thinking salty water and fresh water behave exactly the same for floating | Not connecting salt to density change | Salty water is denser than fresh water, so some objects float more easily in it |
Quick check
- Why does dry wood usually float on water?
- Why does an iron nail usually sink in water?
- Why does ice float on liquid water?
- How can a heavy iron ship float on the sea?
- Stretch: Why might an egg that sinks in plain water float in a glass of very salty water?
Revision tip: Ask yourself: is this object lighter for its size than water, and could its shape trap extra air?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Floating And Sinking.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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