1 US gallon is 3.78 litre - so 2 US gal is 7.56 litre
It is estimated that 10 to 12 inches of snow melts to about 1 inch of water, which is 1/10 to 1/12 of its original volume. 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between 144 (12 x 12 x 12 / 12) and 172.8 (12 x 12 x 12 / 10) cubic inches of water. 144 cubic inches = 2.36 liters and 172.8 cubic inches = 2.83 liters. 1 U.S. gallon = 3.7854 liters, so 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between (2.36/3.7854) and (2.83/3.7854) gallons, or about 5/8 to 3/4 of a gallon of water.
There are 1000 liters of water in one cubic meter.
it decomposes into water & carbon dioxide :)
A single piece of paper can hold a small amount of water, usually just a few drops. Paper is porous, so it can absorb water to some extent, but it will quickly become saturated and start to break down if too much water is added.
Break down products must be soluble in water in order to be excreted from the body through urine. Solubility in water allows for easy transport through the bloodstream and filtration by the kidneys.
Something like 326,000,000,000,000,000,000 gallons (326 million trillion gallons) of water (roughly 1,260,000,000,000,000,000,000 liters) can be found on our planet. This water is in a constant cycle -- it evaporates from the ocean, travels through the air, rains down on the land and then flows back to the ocean.
The River Thames at London discharges 2,324 cubic foot of water a second. This is approximately 14,475 Imperial Gallons a second (17,384 US Gallons). Further downstream, the rate is 876 cu.ft/sec at Oxford and 1,402 cu.ft/sec at Reading.
divide by 128 to get gallons
It when water goes into the rock and then the water freezes and break the rock
It is estimated that 10 to 12 inches of snow melts to about 1 inch of water, which is 1/10 to 1/12 of its original volume. 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between 144 (12 x 12 x 12 / 12) and 172.8 (12 x 12 x 12 / 10) cubic inches of water. 144 cubic inches = 2.36 liters and 172.8 cubic inches = 2.83 liters. 1 U.S. gallon = 3.7854 liters, so 1 cubic foot of snow would melt down to between (2.36/3.7854) and (2.83/3.7854) gallons, or about 5/8 to 3/4 of a gallon of water.
It depends on what fluid you have. If it's water, it's about 435.9 gallons, depending on temperature. If you have that weight of gasoline, it's be more gallons, because gasoline is relatively light. If it's carbon tetrachloride (a solvent used for cleaning), it'd be fewer gallons. A 55-gallon drum of water weighs 458 pounds plus tare. Fill that same drum with gasoline and it's 336 pounds. Carbon tet and it's 733 pounds, more than twice as much as gasoline. And if it was mercury, it'd be REALLY heavy. Don't drop that drum on your toes!
The water will not ever break down. You will need to remove it.
No.
1-2 gallons of muriatic acid will break down the buffer solution(alkalinity in the water). Will then probably have to raise pH back up
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, 6 gallons is actually greater than 22 liters. Yeah, I know, it sounds weird, but that's just how the conversion rates work. Like, don't stress about it too much, it's just some liquid measurements, you know?
It depends on the concentration of the bromine tablets. Typically, one bromine tablet treats around 500 gallons of water, so for 5 gallons you would need about 0.1 tablet if you break it down proportionally.
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, 1 liter of water weighs about 1 kilogram because, you know, science and stuff. Therefore, if you have 12 liters of water, you've got yourself 12 kilograms of liquid goodness. It's like converting liters to kilograms is the easiest math problem since 1+1.