Yes, any water can be evaporated.
tap water will evaporate the fastest. I know this because i did the experiment for school.
Yes, chlorine can evaporate from tap water over time, especially if the water is left out in an open container.
no
The boiling water will evaporate (turn to vapor). The ice will melt (turn to liquid) and then begin to evaporate (turn to vapor). The tap water will begin to evaporate (turn to vapor).
Salt water will evaporate first. Salt takes up space so to speak and there's less "water" to evaporate and so it seems to evaporate faster.
yes
bottled, because it has less minerals to be evaporated. ANSWER: Whatever water has the most contaminants since that does not evaporate
The speed of this depends on pH, temperature and volume of water.
They should be the same, because the tap water will evaporate and leave any minerals in it on the surface of whatever it evaporated from, whilst the salt water will evaporate, leaving all the salt behind (in the form of salt crystals)
Purified or tap water. the both evaporate at about the same rate. :D
Letting tap water sit out may reduce the chlorine content as it evaporates, but it will not significantly affect the mineral content. Minerals in water do not evaporate like volatile compounds such as chlorine.
This depends on where you are, and the quality of your tap water and rain water among other factors. Filtering: Yes The lessening of particulates in the water enables it to evaporate faster. Other Water Treatment: Probably No The addition of chlorine or fluorine to the water may cause it to evaporate slower. Temperature: Whichever is hotter will evaporate faster. Hot tap water evaporates faster than cold tap water. Hot rain on a hot day may evaporate faster than cold tap water.