the people get get high off morfine at the hospital from getting shocked by the electrity in the pool and they're also shocked because your such a dumb person for asking this question.
Lightening strikes most in places where there is a lot of metal. It does not hit places where rubber is. It can hit anything that leads to the ground.
Most of the water will be scattered by the spinning winds as a spray.
As it is commonly found in pools - No. It can be toxic if inhaled or exposed on high concentrations. One way this sometimes happens at home and by accident is if people stand by the edge of the pool and pour a large amount of chlorine into the water. Dangerous chlorine gas vapors can rise from the water and cause unconsciousness and drowning if the person happens to fall forward into the pool. This generally requires standing in one position for a long time, often hunched over the pool, while a lot of chlorine is added to the water.
Pool.
That depends on what size pool you have. If you have a smaller pool, the amount would be less, and if you have a larger pool, the amount is more. Consult the instructions on a chlorine box for what size pool and how much to use.
QUESTION IS A REPEAT - - CAN WE NOT EDIT OR ELIMINATE THESE ??? PLEASE....
It is for your own safety. If the lightning strikes the water, it will hurt you.
"Pool" without the article is a game played on a table with pockets in the corners. The player strikes a white ball with a long stick or cue, and the white ball strikes another ball or balls with the aim of causing the right ball or balls to go into one of the pockets."A pool", with the article, is a small body of standing water, natural or artificial. A pool artificially created to swim in is a swimming pool. The verb "to pool" means to pour together, as in the phrase "to pool your resources." When a group of people put their resources together the result is called a pool. For example if a group of people put their automotive resources together so that a different person every day drives the whole group, it is called a "car pool". Gambling games in which everyone adds to a pot which is then won by one of the contributors are also often called pools.
you sink.
normally nothing happens unless there is to much in the water. if the pool has high chlorine levels it might turn brownish, black, and lumpy. by the way are you people peeing in pools?
You end up with a lot of salt on the bottom of the pool.
Then you can't swim
Absolutely, if the pool happens to be 41.25 feet long.
Technically, is a scratch, but most people will just let you put it back.
All the water dissapears.
Still used as an Olympic pool for practice and events.
Lightening strikes most in places where there is a lot of metal. It does not hit places where rubber is. It can hit anything that leads to the ground.