Want this question answered?
get farther apart
It depends on the frequency (and size) of the drops.
All you need is two drops that are not the same shape to prove they are not the same. Compare drops of water dripping from a tap (faucet) which is elongated, and one in zero gravity, is spherical.
whats the answer?
condensation from the ceiling drops water onto the ground and over the years it drops more and more water and the water dries and the minerals in it build up until it rises out of the ground .... stalagmites are rare as they come from the ground ... normally you find stalactites
It means that you should sell your home and move far away! No jk If its your faucet that is dripping I think in time your faucet needs repaired or replaced because if it drips only when you run water at another fixture (faucet) and doesn't drip if you have everything off then you have a strange faucet but its most likely caused by water hammer (sudden stop of water flow) and if you don't think its cause by that then it also could be from water pressure which when you turn on another faucet and the pressure drops a little and from the drop of pressure and it vibrates your seal in your faucet which could make it drip but very rare but possible.
Sometimes, yeah.
water from a faucet WITH A FEW DROPS OF WATER CONDITIONER
The answer depends on the source of the drops (e.g. an eye-droppers vs a leady faucet). In general though, 1 cc = 1 mL = ~20 drops
3 x 60 x 24 = 4320 drops... The reference to ml is irrelevant.
Rain falls on the ground.
Dew