Depends on the pool you're comparing it to..
The number of swimming pools that can be filled with 7,720,000,000,000 gallons of water depends on the size of the pool. For example, a standard Olympic swimming pool holds about 660,000 gallons of water. Therefore, you could fill approximately 11,700,000 Olympic-sized pools with that amount of water (7,720,000,000,000 divided by 660,000).
Atr a 100,000,000 gallons oil spill that would fill about 200 Olympic size swimming pools
FINA sets the standards for the size of Olympic pools. The volume of an Olympic-size swimming pool is 660,430 gallons or 88,287 cubic feet.
2.0 meters
0.001 swimming pools.
22
Swimming pool sports started from Britain around 1830, but first swimming pools games started in Olympic in 1896.
I spent some time with this one so bare with me. 1,000,000,000 or 1 Billion
The official water temperature ranges for Olympic-sized pools used for the Olympic games are: Swimming Pools: 25-28 °C Diving pools: Not less than 26 °C Water Polo pools: 25-27 °C Synchronized swimming: 26-28 °C
Olympic swimming pools use about 650000 gallons of water, so if you're trying to shock one using 10% liquid chlorine, you would need about 200 gallons of liquid shock - or if you're only adding choline as a primary sanitizer, not as a shock, you'd use about 65 gallons.
Swimming pools come in various sizes. However, Olympic pools must be 50 metres long and 25 metres wide.
Oh, dude, 1 billion gallons of water is like... a billion gallons. I mean, it's a lot, like seriously a lot. So, if you ever need to fill up a billion-gallon swimming pool, you know where to find the water!