Guys,
I
am was doing something wrong but I don't know where. It's a very simple physics problem.

I have a bucket on the ground full of water. On the water surface there is 1 Bar of atmosferic pressure.
Now I take a 20meter pipe open in one end and I fill it with water.
Now I submerge the open pipe end in the bucket and I keep the 20 meter pipe full of water vertical.
Let's think about the hydrostatic pressure in the pipe.
10meter water are 1 bar, so at the 10 meter high I have 0 bar absolute. But if I move higher I go negative?
What is the absolute pressure on the top of the pipe?
-1 Bar? So below the vacuum, ehh?
ahh while I was writing it I got it...

In a static condition the pressure difference of 20meter water top-bottom are 2 bar.
The 1 bar on the bucket water surface can't keep op with the 2 bar of the water.... so at equilibrium I have th e first 10meter pipe full of water and the rest is vacuum.
Basically when I submerge the pipe, I create an atmosferic barometer... because the 10meter water on the top flows down in the bucket creating vacuum.
Sorry for posting this but I had already almost written it up.