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On average, the size of a rain drop is 0.1-0.5mm. The size of a rain drop depends on the amount of water in an area together. For example, if there are a large number of water drops in a small area and they collide, they would then join together and become a bigger droplet. If they get too big, then then would split into yet another drop.
A rain gauge can be of any size, as it is just some type of container used to measure how much rain falls in an area.
Depending on the size of the water droplets rain can fall anywhere from 5 to 18 MPH at sea level. Rain drops that would be large enough to fall faster than 18 MPH break up into smaller droplets once they reach this speed.
it depends on the how much rain there it is and yeah!
The wind if it is windy the drops explode on the way down to Earth full size raindrops are mostly seen with very little Wind.
Rain drops are not uniform in size, but the largest drops are about 20 to the ml (0.00005 l each). Very light rain (usually described as "sprinkling" or "misting") may have drops only 1% that large.
A certain size to fall - color is irrelevant.
An instrument for measuring the size of drops suspended from a capillary tube, used in the drop-weight method. Also known as stactometer; stalogometer.
On average, the size of a rain drop is 0.1-0.5mm. The size of a rain drop depends on the amount of water in an area together. For example, if there are a large number of water drops in a small area and they collide, they would then join together and become a bigger droplet. If they get too big, then then would split into yet another drop.
The first US quarters minted in 1796 ,1804,1805,1806 and 1807 were approximately 27.5 mm in diameter. Quarter minting was suspended until 1815 when the size was changed to 27 mm in diameter. This size quarter was minted until 1828 when quarter minting was again suspended. When it resumed again in 1831 the diameter had been changed to 24.3 mm and has been the standard for the US quarters until the present.
In a small data set, the range. However, I would not like to try and find the range for the volume of rain drops, or the size of sand grains!
Rainsense wipers work using infared technology to count how many rain drops fill a specific area of the windhsield, how fast they fill that space and the size of the drops. If you are sure you are working the wipers correctly, then you need to have the system checked as it could be a loose connector or a bad infared sensor.
Depends on the size of the drops.
It depends on the size of the drops which, in turn, depends on the surface tension of the liquid.
- the grain size of the suspended particles - the concentration of the suspended particles - the density of the suspended particles - the nature of the liquid (density, viscosity)
A rain gauge can be of any size, as it is just some type of container used to measure how much rain falls in an area.
It depends on the size of the raindrop and the height at which it forms. The larger the raindrop, the faster it will fall. The rain falling to earth begins in clouds as fine droplets, which begin falling very slowly and then collect to form larger drops that fall faster. During the fall, the drops will break up and reform, so the falling speed can vary from 5-20 miles per hour. Rain could take anything from a few minutes to 20+ minutes depending on drop size, height and wind.