It depends on the amount of pressure behind it.
direction water flows through a pipe
what type of material the pipe is made out of.
That depends on the pressure behind the flow, and on the length of time the flow is allowed to continue.
depends on the pressure pushing through the pipe
It depends on the pressure and the time frame. A billion gallons, if you wait long enough.
Cross-sectional area of pipe is π(1.5)² = 7.07 cm² that means the flow is 10 cm/s x 7.07 cm² = 70.7 cm³/s 70.7 cm³/s x 60 sec = 4240 cm³ or 4.24 Liter
The amount of water that flows through a pipe depends on several factors, including the pipe's diameter, length, material, the pressure of the water supply, and the flow rate. The flow rate is typically measured in liters per minute (L/min) or gallons per minute (GPM). To calculate the exact volume, you would need specific details about the pipe and the conditions of the water flow.
Voltage is the force that causes current to flow through a circuit. In a similar way it isn't pressure that flows through a pipe - it is the fluid flowing through a pipe due to a difference in pressure at the entry and exit of the pipe that causes the fluid to flow through, no pressure flowing through a pipe.
An airpipe is a pipe or tube through which air flows.
The speed at which water flows through your system depends on various factors such as water pressure, pipe size, and any obstructions in the pipes. Generally, water flows at a rate of about 8-12 gallons per minute in a typical household plumbing system.
Depends on the diameter of the pipe and the speed at which the water travels through it.
What as it freezes expands. The pipe will become blocked by the ice, water will cease to flow. In extreme circumstances teh pipe can split at the site where teh freezing water expands. Then following a thaw water flows again and we have a leak at the fracture site