One of the most common causes is that if some else uses water in the household, say to fill a kettle or to water the garden, then your pressure will drop as the water comes from the same inlet.
This does vary slightly according to the shower, but for a shower without a pump, using a gravity feed, a water pressure of at least 0.1 bar is recommended. If your water pressure is low you will need to install a pumped shower.
yes you can but the water would have to be close to freezing and the room would have to be vary cold
Water pressure increases as depth increases.
I cannot imagine a situation where someone would expose their skin to steam, steam is after all the result of boiling water, you would be badly burnt. Perhaps you will add a little more information?
The boiling point of water is always ~100oC. However, it will vary depending on impurities (e.g. salt water has lower bp) and pressure (higher pressure, higher bp).
The costs will vary according to the quality of the corner shower stall. However a medium quality corner shower stall would be about $6000 to buy and install.
Theoretically at 0ºC, 32ºF or 273.15K (at 101300Pa pressure)... In a real life experiment would vary depending on athmospheric pressure.
the shape and height causes it to vary with temperature,pressure,and the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere
in atmospheric pressure water evaporates at 100 degrees Celsius and freeze at 0 degrees Celsius. This may vary based on pressure
let them feel it. depending on what the water is running from... a slow drip from a sink, a small water fall, a gushing and rushing water fall, a shower...the sounds vary. but for a slow drip from a sink i would say in dots. like plunk plunk plunk. for the rushing and gushing water im out of ideas.
Reg. shower heads are 2.5 gal. per min. -- 2.5 x 5 = 12.5 gal.Most shower heads these days limit the amount of water flow to less than 3 gallons a minute, so a five minute shower would use about 15 gallons (57 liters).My shower head has 2.5 gpm written on it. I believe most shower heads have the same rate of flow. 2.5gpm x 5 min = 12.5 Gallons I suggest checking your own showerhead to see if the gpm is listed. You can always check with its accuracy with a five gallon bucket. Let your shower run for five minutes and count how many times you can fill the bucket.
How does liquid pressure vary with depth