What Floats
Floating and Sinking: What Floats
What Floats
What Floats
What you'll learn
- An object that stays on top of water without going down is said to float.
- A dry wooden block generally floats because wood is less dense than water.
- A plastic bottle cap or an empty, closed plastic bottle floats on water.
- A dry sponge can float at first because it traps air inside it.
- Air-filled objects like a football or a balloon float easily on water.
Key concepts
Level 1 - Core idea
Verbal: Objects that are less dense than water, or that trap air inside them, stay on the surface of water instead of going down. This is called floating.
Symbolic: less dense than water -> floats; trapped air -> helps floating
Visual: Place a wooden block and a football on a bucket of water — both float on the surface because they are lighter for their size than water.
Level 2 - Going deeper
Notice where you see this idea at home, at school, and in your neighbourhood — connecting the concept to daily life makes it easier to remember and use.
Level 3 - NCERT anchor
NCERT EVS Looking Around 4 — water and daily-life chapters include simple activities of dropping objects into water to observe floating and sinking.
Worked example
You place a dry wooden block on a bucket of water. What happens and why?
Step 1 - Wood is less dense than water.
Step 2 - Being less dense means it is lighter than an equal amount of water.
Step 3 - So the block stays on top of the water's surface.
Answer: The wooden block floats because wood is less dense than water.
An empty, tightly closed plastic bottle is placed in a pond. Does it float or sink?
Step 1 - The bottle is empty, so it is filled mostly with air.
Step 2 - Air is much lighter than the same volume of water.
Step 3 - The trapped air keeps the closed bottle very light overall.
Answer: The empty closed bottle floats because it is filled with light air.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| All plastic objects float | Ignoring whether the object is solid or hollow | A solid, heavy plastic object can sink; hollow, air-filled ones float |
| Wood always sinks because it feels heavy in hand | Confusing weight in hand with density compared to water | Wood generally floats because it is less dense than water |
| Only empty objects can float | Overgeneralising the reason for floating | Floating depends on density and trapped air, not just being empty |
| A football floats because it is round | Mixing up shape with the real reason | A football floats mainly because it is filled with light air, not just its round shape |
Quick check
- What does it mean when an object floats on water?
- Why does a dry wooden block usually float?
- Why does an empty, closed plastic bottle float on water?
- Name one air-filled object that floats easily.
- Stretch: Why might a dry sponge that floats at first eventually start to sink?
Revision tip: Ask yourself: is this object lighter for its size than water, or does it trap air inside?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on What Floats.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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