Since 1 gallon equals 90,840 drops and 1 Olympic sized swimming pool has 660,430 gallons, there are 59,993,461,200 drops in an Olympic size swimming pool.
Not even close.
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
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).
Swimming, synchronized swimming, diving, and water polo.
An official Olympic-sized swimming pool holds 880,000 gallons of water, which is equivalent to 112,000,000 fluid ounces. This conversion is based on the fact that there are 128 fluid ounces in a gallon. Therefore, multiplying 880,000 gallons by 128 fluid ounces per gallon gives you the total in fluid ounces.
Swimming has been held at every Olympic games since 1896. Open water swimming was added in the 2008 Olympics.
I spent some time with this one so bare with me. 1,000,000,000 or 1 Billion
Yes.
Swimming Water polo Diving Synchronised Swimming
about 100!
Two reasons: First, the volume of a human body is quite low compared to the volume of even a moderate sized swimming pool. If you jump into an Olympic-sized pool, you're only going to increase the water depth by a small fraction of an inch. Second, they have overflow drains to prevent it.
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