In the world of science, there are 20 drops of water in a milliliter. If you consider a drop to be what comes out of, say, a pipette, the size of that drop may vary. So does the definition of a drop: see the discussion at link below. The most common usage for a "drop" would be the metric drop, which is .05 ml. The older English usage of minim is slightly larger than the metric drop, but that usage is archaic.
A liter does equal ~2.11 pints, so there are 1000/2.1133764 ml in a pint, which = 473.17 ml per pint. At 20 drops per ml, that means that there are 9463.5 drops in a pint.
That depends on how big the puddle is, and what size drops you measure with.
at least a million droplets of water are in a raindrop.
I gram of water contains about 6.022 x 1023 molecules
but bucket is 102204 x 1023
One raindrop = one drop of water (but it can actually be more or less depending upon the size of the raindrop).
20ppm
3 droplets make one snow flake
lots and lots and lots
You're stupid!
It's 0.003 litres
No, its exactly 600 drops of water or whatever your doing it with.
Surface tension of water draws it into a larger drop. It will do that on any nonporous surface- metal, glass, smooth plastic, etc.
A tiny amount of liquid water, of microscopic size -- though still containing a huge number of water molecules. Many droplets must merge to form just one normal-size drop of water.
One can view images of water droplets from photo sharing sites such as Instagram and PhotoBucker. One can also view pictures of water droplets via internet video and picture sharing websites such as YouTube.
the water droplets indicate that the air is cooler on one side of the glass. If the droplets are inside, then the outside is cooler. If the droplets are outside, it means the inside is cooler.
A droplet is a very small drop of a liquid. It is typically used to describe tiny, spherical or nearly spherical particles of liquid. For example, raindrops are droplets of water falling from the sky, and when you put a drop of water on a surface,
5,000
3 droplets make one snow flake
This is one of many parts of the water cycle. water needs to condense (turn into a cloud) Then it will precipitate (a fancy word for rain ect.) or as you call them ,water droplets. By the way if you are not in the fifth grade (below it ) do not worry it is simple fifth grade science
One Billion
Clouds form when water droplets collect on dust particles in the air. When the clouds become saturated, rain falls from the sky.
Water droplets in the sky after a storm.
I think you can figure this one out.