It depends how big the drops are - but it would be 86,400 drops !... Having just done a quick experiment - five drops from my kitchen tap filled a 5 ml teaspoon - so it would be 8.64 litres over a 24-hour period.
No, a drop of water isn't even the same as another drop of water. They come in different sizes and aren't adequate for precision uses. For an amazing drop search "Pitch drop experiment".
take a cylindrical measuring thing and measure the amount of water in it then drop the item in then measure that amount and subtract the first amount from the second
drop of water :)
The equation is 32 feet per second, squared or 9.8 meters/second squared.
drops of water can be of different size depending on the charge
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
If you drop it and it rolls back into the water, you take another free drop, if this rolls back into the water you place the ball where it touched the ground on the second drop. Remember, no nearer the hole.
If there was literally no water on earth, we would all die. Period...
About 25,000,000
That will vary A LOT depending on how you drop it. If you drop a lot at once, so that air resistance can be considered to be negligible, it will drop 5 meters in the first second, another 15 meters in the second second, and another 25 meters in the third second.
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
If the water table is not topped up by regular rain fall, as in a dry period, the water table would naturally be low.
150,000 gallons
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 :)
A Drop of Water was created in 1987.
You drop it once, if it comes to rest on the path, you drop it again, on the second drop if it comes to rest on the path you place it where the ball touched the grass first on the second drop.