I will assume that you are wanting to know the depth of the water for a 24x48" above ground pool. With the wall being 48" in height, I would usually tell the buyer to subtract 4-6" off of the wall height. So, in the case of the 48" wall, the water level will be anywhere between 42-44".
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It depends on the diameter and depth of the pool. It should say on the box.
Depth. To ascend is to go up, and to descend is go down. We measure the height of things above the ground and the depth of things below the ground.
Diameter x Diamater X Depth X 5.2
They use the same measurement, but height is considered to be above the 'zero mark', while depth is below this mark. Often, the ground, floor, or sea level serves as this 'zero mark'.
The town of Lightning Ridge is above ground. Only the opal mine shafts go underground, and these vary in depth.
Place it appx 42" (aff) above finished floor. Be sure it is depth is no more than the depth of the tank top so you do not hit your head when standing up
18 feet
It is not, air pressure is greatest at sea level. This is because the air pressure is caused by the weight of the air above you and at sea level the depth of the air column above you is at its maximum.
There is no specific depth stated. Two to three feed deep with staked angular support from the pole to the ground will do the job fine.
Bulk density generally increases with soil depth due to increasing pressure from the soil column above. Porosity is inversely related to bulk density, thus porosity should decrease as soil depth increases.
At greater depth, the pressure increases, due to the weight of the liquid above.
Because of the weight of the water above.