In the world of science, there are 20 drops of water in a milliliter. If you consider a drop to be what comes out of, say, a pipette, the size of that drop may vary. So does the definition of a drop: see the discussion at link below. The most common usage for a "drop" would be the metric drop, which is .05 ml. The older English usage of minim is slightly larger than the metric drop, but that usage is archaic.
A liter does equal ~2.11 pints, so there are 1000/2.1133764 ml in a pint, which = 473.17 ml per pint. At 20 drops per ml, that means that there are 9463.5 drops in a pint.
You're stupid!
This process is called coalescence, where smaller water droplets combine to form larger ones. This often occurs in clouds when tiny water droplets come together to form larger raindrops due to gravity pulling them down.
No, one drop of water is not equal to a fluid ounce. A fluid ounce is a unit of measurement used to measure volume, while a drop is a very small unit of volume that can vary depending on the liquid and dropper size. It typically takes many drops to add up to a fluid ounce.
A snowflake is made up of many individual ice crystals or droplets that combine and stick together as they fall through the atmosphere. The exact number of droplets can vary, but generally, each snowflake is estimated to contain thousands to millions of ice crystals.
There are 1000 drops in one liter. So, one drop is 0.003 liters (3 ml / 1000).
Surface tension of water draws it into a larger drop. It will do that on any nonporous surface- metal, glass, smooth plastic, etc.
A tiny amount of liquid water, of microscopic size -- though still containing a huge number of water molecules. Many droplets must merge to form just one normal-size drop of water.
A droplet is usually defined as being less than 0.5mm in diameter, like what you see in a fine spray. If the droplets were small enough, then I guess you could fit a million or so into one drop, but its more likely to vary - maybe in the thousands or ten-thousands.
One can view images of water droplets from photo sharing sites such as Instagram and PhotoBucker. One can also view pictures of water droplets via internet video and picture sharing websites such as YouTube.
It takes millions of water vapor droplets to come together in a cloud to form one raindrop. These droplets condense and collide with each other, growing in size until they are heavy enough to fall as rain.
This is one of many parts of the water cycle. water needs to condense (turn into a cloud) Then it will precipitate (a fancy word for rain ect.) or as you call them ,water droplets. By the way if you are not in the fifth grade (below it ) do not worry it is simple fifth grade science
When water vapor cools high in the atmosphere, it can condense into liquid water droplets. These droplets may then collide and merge with one another, forming larger droplets. Eventually, these droplets may become heavy enough to fall as precipitation, such as rain or snow.
No, fog and a mixture of fine water droplets in the air are not examples of an emulsion. An emulsion is a mixture of two or more immiscible liquids where one is dispersed in the other, such as oil and water in mayonnaise. Fog is a suspension of water droplets in the air.
A water molecule has 3 atoms. Water (like a drop, or cup) is made of many molecules and is in cells. It is not however made up of cells.
Water droplets in the sky after a storm.
One example of condensation is when water vapor in the air cools and turns into water droplets on the outside of a cold drink.
the water droplets indicate that the air is cooler on one side of the glass. If the droplets are inside, then the outside is cooler. If the droplets are outside, it means the inside is cooler.