It can and it sometimes it can't. It depends if the water drop was close to it. If was close to it the water drop would attrack the next water drop you drop
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 :)
The sound of a water drop can be written as "drip" or "plip."
The diameter of a typical drop of water is approximately 2-4 millimeters.
A microscope can be used to observe the behavior of a water drop by magnifying the drop and allowing you to see details such as its movement, shape, and interactions with surfaces. This can help in studying properties like surface tension, adhesion, and evaporation of the water drop.
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.
Every Drop Counts means that even if u save a drop of water, you have saved water...For Example if you see a leaking tap, and the water is wasting drop by drop, so you say "Only small water drops are wasting" But NO slowly slowly a lot of water is wasted even by drops, so remember Every Drop Counts Hope this helped :D
water water every where but not a single drop to drink
One drop at a time dose
I have no idea but if it is 100 milion gallons an hour then it must be over a billion
At the center of every raindrop is a tiny particle, such as dust or salt, around which water vapor has condensed. These particles serve as nucleation sites around which water molecules cluster and form droplets.
If you strap someone down so that they can't move anything and you take a water droper and drop one drop of water on their forehead every six seconds for a long period of time
about 700ml but remember every drop it consume it wees out
150,000 gallons
Every Last Drop has 272 pages.
There are several possibilities including: > Dose not high enough > Patient is too impatient, antibiotics are working, symptoms slow to fade > Resistant bacteria
In experienced Biologist often have difficulties using a microscope to follow ting oraganisms as they move about in a drop of pond of water on a microscope because the hardly have used mycroscopes in their early life or in schools and colledges and univercities .
Every Last Drop was created on 2008-09-30.