That depends on the temperature of the air -at cold temperatures well below freezing, about 10 flakes to make an equivalent rain drop. Near freezing, where the flake is wetter, about 4 flakes per drop
It really depends how you define a drop, as it is pretty ambiguous. If we use a pretty accepted conversion of 1 drop = 0.05 mL, then: 1 L = 1000 mL 1000 mL x (1 drop / .05 mL) = 20,000 drops
generally, 1 drop of water = 0.05 ml. As density of water is 1g/cm3. This 1 drop = 0.05 mg. OR 1 mg = 20 drops. therefore 200 mg = 200*20 = 4000 drops (approximately).
1 drop = 1 gram
9
2
25,134,521,365,216,466,485,641
Here are all the words I can think of...snowflakessnowflakesnowknowknowsflawlawlawssawsawslakelakesfakefakeswakewakessoowaaloewalkwalkssakelowlowssowsewsowssewsnews
There is an infinity of snowflakes. There like people. They come and they go. You can't stop it. So, to answer your question, there are infinity of snowflakes.
The word snowflakes has two syllables: snow-flakes.
each snowflake is different, so there are endless amounts of snowflakes.
one pound
there is 300 000 million in one snowflake made of lepricons urine and thats because the factor of a snowflakes circumference is equivalent to a lepricons urination pattern.. so that states that the inside of a snowflake was made from the lepricons urine evaporating into the water cycle from the rainbow, following the water cycle into the clouds and down with precipitation (snow) making the snowflakes look the way they do.
due to strong hydrogen bonding between water as compare to ice form
oktilyon
depends where you are
1billion
The number of snowflakes in the world varies at any one time. More are being created all the time. They are formed by freezing water particles high in the atmosphere. No one knows how many are in the world at one time.