it is big inside but small out side
adhesion
It all depends on if you drop the water fast or if you drop it slow. Ideally, everyone performing the experiment would include the following: - distilled waterThere are a lot of factors involved. The cohesion and adhesion ('stickiness') of water molecules can be effected by things like oils (on surface pennies from peoples' skin) and other contaminates on the penny. The size of the dropper or pipette will determine the size of each water droplet - the larger the drop, the fewer number of drops will fit on the penny. The manner in which the water is added to the penny is also a factor. Water has a cohesive nature (the molecules are kind of like magnets and are attracted to one another). Therefore, if the drop from the pipette is allowed to touch the water already on the surface of the penny, the water can be 'pulled' out of the dropper. When this happens, the size (volume) of the drop is not always the same - it could be a very small amount (which will result in a very large number of drops), or a large amount. Soap causes the cohesiveness ('stickiness') of the water molecules to decrease so they are not as strongly attracted to each other. Because of this, when soap is added to the water the number of drops that can be placed on the penny will decrease. The water molecules can't 'stick' together as well, so the water on top of the penny spills off sooner than it would with non-soapy water. Ideally, everyone performing the experiment would include the following: - distilled water (to start with) - same type/size of calibrated dropper/pipette - same date of penny - penny cleaned as thoroughly as possible using same cleaning procedure - same 'dropping' procedure
A penny can hold a significant amount of water due to its surface tension properties. The water molecules adhere to each other and the metal surface of the penny, preventing the water from spilling over the edges. This allows the water to collect and form a convex meniscus on top of the penny.
An ipodtouch can handle up to 300 drops. That's why so many people like apple products so much.
Small drops of liquids tend to be spherical because of their surfacetension. Surface tension is the result of intermolecular attractingforces. When you put a small drop of a liquid on a solid surface, theinermolecular forces of the solid surface will tend to attract the liquidmolecules. Depending on the magnitude of the different forces, the solidsurface will present certain degree of 'wettability'. If you compare howa drop of water sits on a clean penny and on a penny that you rubbedwith your fingers, you'll notice that the drops contact angle differ.The drop on the clean penny will cover more contact area (more wettablesurface) than the drop on the 'oily' penny (less wettable surface). Oilreppels water because the intermolecular forces between the water andoil molecules are very weak compared to the intermolecular forces betweensimilar molecules.Now, water intermolecular forces are paricularly strong, and so the dropof water on the penny will resist more than the oil molecules to be spreadedon the surface of the penny. Oil drops tend to wet more the surface of thepenny and will tend to occupy more area. And so you'l get fewer oil dropson the penny's surface.
Ideally, everyone performing the experiment would include the following: - distilled waterThere are a lot of factors involved. The cohesion and adhesion ('stickiness') of water molecules can be effected by things like oils (on surface pennies from peoples' skin) and other contaminates on the penny. The size of the dropper or pipette will determine the size of each water droplet - the larger the drop, the fewer number of drops will fit on the penny. The manner in which the water is added to the penny is also a factor. Water has a cohesive nature (the molecules are kind of like magnets and are attracted to one another). Therefore, if the drop from the pipette is allowed to touch the water already on the surface of the penny, the water can be 'pulled' out of the dropper. When this happens, the size (volume) of the drop is not always the same - it could be a very small amount (which will result in a very large number of drops), or a large amount. Soap causes the cohesiveness ('stickiness') of the water molecules to decrease so they are not as strongly attracted to each other. Because of this, when soap is added to the water the number of drops that can be placed on the penny will decrease. The water molecules can't 'stick' together as well, so the water on top of the penny spills off sooner than it would with non-soapy water. Ideally, everyone performing the experiment would include the following: - distilled water (to start with) - same type/size of calibrated dropper/pipette - same date of penny - penny cleaned as thoroughly as possible using same cleaning procedure - same 'dropping' procedure
So very many were made is just a penny
It is when you hold the racket across your body and do a little tap on the birdie so it drops over the net
Homeopathic hcg drops are just another variaton on the drops itself. Homeopathic drops are diluted many times from the original formula so the side effects are not as plentiful.
There are 960 drops in 8 tsp so 120 in 1 tsp. Hope this helped.
If the coin is double-struck, it can be worth up to $30,000. So if you see double, hold onto it!
1 penny is worth 1/100 or a hundredth of a dollar. there are 100 pennies in a dollar. so a penny is a fraction of 1 dollar.