Today I spent the afternoon explaining buoyancy to a friend who insisted that heavier objects always sink. It's a common mistake—mass feels like the obvious culprit when something goes under. But I pulled out a beach ball and a marble, and the demonstration did the work. The beach ball weighs more in total, yet it floats. The marble, tiny and dense, drops straight to the bottom. The real story is density: mass divided by volume. If an object is less dense than the fluid it's in, it floats. If it's denser, it sinks.
To make it stick, I reached for an analogy. Imagine a crowd of people packed shoulder-to-shoulder in a small room versus the same number of people spread across a gymnasium. The room feels heavier, more compressed—that's density. A steel ship floats because its hollow hull spreads mass over a huge volume, lowering average density below water's threshold. A solid steel ball of the same mass would sink immediately. Shape and internal structure matter as much as the material itself.
Of course, buoyancy has limits. My friend asked if a boat could float on air, and I had to clarify: air is a fluid too, but its density is so low that you'd need an object lighter than a balloon to stay suspended without active thrust. Submarines demonstrate the principle in reverse—they flood ballast tanks to increase density and sink, then blow them out to rise again. Controlled density changes let them hover at precise depths.