1 foot
The size of a drop of any liquid depends on how the drop is created, so it is not possible to say as a general rule that any particular amount of water is in a "drop of water." You first have to know the size of the drop of water.
A small object has a larger surface area (in proportion to its weight) than a larger one. Therefore, a small object, like a small drop of water, will fall slower - it has more air resistance (again, in proportion to its weight). However, it will not float indefinitely; it will simply take longer to get to the ground.
peristaltic action
Depends
Adding soap to water when it is on wax paper will cause it to separate. This will make it bubble up.
SPLAT!
to make the perfect water balloon, simply use a regular water balloon rather than a water balloon. regular water balloons can get as big as a human head. the down side is they don't pop easily. you can drop them on the floor and they wont pop.
When you drop a balloon, gravity pulls it down towards the ground. As it falls, the air inside the balloon is pushed out through the opening, causing the balloon to deflate and eventually land on the ground.
No it is not, a drop of blood is smaller than a drop of water but if you drop two drops of blood then that equals the right amount of water :)
Yes, the height of a falling water balloon can affect the splatter. A higher drop height typically results in a bigger splatter as the impact forces the water to disperse more widely upon contact with the ground.
It forms a cloud
The solvent is the larger amount in this case (water).
Surface tension of water draws it into a larger drop. It will do that on any nonporous surface- metal, glass, smooth plastic, etc.
no
THe water droplet acts as a magnifying lens.
A drop of water acts like a magnifier because the curved surface of the water drop can bend light rays passing through it. This bending of light can make objects underneath the water drop appear larger and closer when viewed from the other side of the drop. This effect is known as refraction.
An american poet in the XIX