Maybe this would be better: She fell down and landed in a bucket of water. :D
One way to do it would be to have a bucket of water with a hole in it that is connected to a pulley and weights. As the bucket gets lighter, the weights cause the hand to turn. You would have to vary the dripping to calibrate it.
Evaporation rates vary with weather conditions. The BEST way to simply determine whether the pool has a leak is called the 'bucket test'. 1) Partially fill a bucket with the pool water and mark or measure the water level in the bucket. 2) mark or measure the water level in the pool(does not have to be the same level as water in bucket) 3)Place the bucket on the top step of the pool and leave for 24 hours (or for as long as you like, but sufficiently long to see a change in water level due to evaporation). The fall in the two water levels, pool and bucket, should be exactly the same (eg: 0.5" drop in pool waterlevel and 0.5" drop in bucket water level). If the water level in the pool has fallen further than has the water level in the bucket, the pool has a leak.
To calculate the volume of an irregularly shaped object, a good idea would be to get a bucket full of water and submerge that object into the bucket. Then measure the amount of water that runs over and that should be the volume of your object. For example if you take a sealed bottle of bottle stick it in a bucket filled with water, then let it's volume filll the space and displace the water. The water that is displaced or the water that runs out is the volume of your irregular shape. Get it?
The strainer may be clogged. Try removing and cleaning it.
It is important to disinfect cleaning equiptment because (let's say a mop) if you still have gammy stuff on that mop after changing the water in the bucket, you would just be making the water in the bucket more non-sanitary than it would be if you disinfected the mop in the first place.
You would cool a bucket by putting ice into the water.
It depends on the bucket size, but usually a standard size bucket would hold a few litters of water.
How large is the bucket? I would suggest pouring water in to find out.
it would not.
That really depends on the bucket, but it would be measured kilograms.
yes. a picture of a bucket of water would be 2 dimensional.
A bucket or pail, as for water would be "cubo" (also means cube).
Maybe this would be better: She fell down and landed in a bucket of water. :D
No, both buckets would contain approximately the same number of water molecules. Each molecule in a bucket of water from a single source (such as tap water or ocean water) would contain the same number of atoms.
It depends on the size of the bucket!add. But a typical household bucket would be 10 litres, or two gallons.
If you stop the motion of the bucket upside down, the water inside the bucket will continue to move in the direction it was going due to its inertia. This means that the water will temporarily remain in place inside the bucket while the bucket comes to a stop, before eventually falling due to gravity.