The difference is not significant.
Yes, clean water is evaporated faster.
A formula doesn't exist; this depends on the temperature, pressure, room volume, amount of water, etc.
You can, if the water presently in the pool is 'hard' - but be very careful to keep an eye on the Calcium Hardness of the pool water. If you filled a pool with water from the softener, the water would be hungry for calcium and drag it out of the pool walls, making them feel and look like sandpaper. Calcium hardness should be kept within 200-275ppm. best to use regular water for topup and keep the pool water properly balanced (see your local pool store).
It has to do with the interactions with surface area. The more a substance is spread out, the more it will interact with the environment. If you were trying to evaporate a gallon of water, it would have more surface area if you put it into a kiddie pool than a bucket. It's the same idea with ice.
Yes,ower body can effect the water in a pool
Yes, because evaporation is increased at higher temperatures.
Yes, this water is evaporated.
I am not sure how significant this is - in other words, how quickly the swimming pool will react. But the idea is that the wind will result in water evaporating faster.
A boiling pot of water will boil faster if you stir it. I would expect it creates more surface area for heat exchange to occur, resulting evaporation. A pool should act the same.
If by chlorine pool, you mean a pool filled with fresh water that uses chlorine (or bromine) as a sanitizer, then the question really is: Is a salt water pool faster than a fresh water pool? If by "faster", you mean ability to swim fast, then the answer is the salt water pool. A swimmer floats higher on salt water, therefore there is less water contacting less surface area on the swimmer's body, therefore, there is less resistance and a person could swim faster in a salt water pool. The salinity in a salt water pool is so minimal (maybe 1/6th to 1/12th the salinity of the ocean) the boyancy difference between a fresh water and salt water pool is minimal, if even measurable. However, swim times are measured in such small fractions of a second, the difference would be measurable in say Olympic type events, but not in your local swim club or school pool. Both answers above make good observations. I must say, though, that I disagree with the conclusion of the first. Having more surface area exposed makes for more drag, not less. Submarines are faster than surface ships and porpoises are faster under water than they are on the surface, right?
if there's sun there is evaporation
No. The salt is left behind in the pool , with the salt concentration becoming higher.
The rate at which your pool evaporates depends on a combination of the temperature the wind and relative humidity Tis can be between 12 to 25 mm per day. If you feel that you may have a leak some where The thing to do is put water in a water bucket then Mark the water level on it. put a discreet mark on the pools water level and leave it for between 1 and 2 weeks. if the water level of the pool has gone down considerably more than the level in the bucket you probably have a leak somewhere. PS if you can hang the bucket in the pool to keep it at the same temperature all the better
The water is going to evaporate at some rate with or without a cover. You need to add water to the pool at least once per week. Evaporation rates without a cover would be close to 1.5" per week in most areas. k
Let it out over a large lined area to evaporate.
Put it in direct sunlight and let it evaporate
No Pool water evaporates in one day or one week