No, if the container is strongly sealed and the diffusion is impossible by the walls.
can take as long as 17 years
a) if the water is PERFECTLY sterile and the bottle is PERFECTLY closed, the water would stay sterile years and years and years. b) but if the water in the bottle is not 100% sterile or the bottle is not 100% closed (which is more likely) some germs & co migth slowly multiply ... as their number is expected to be relatively low, you can consider the water to be sterile (or at least the number of the little creatures to be nonrelevant) up until the date on the bottle
They slowly evaporate over X amount of googleplex years.
There are many routes through the water cycle. If a drop of water falls on a hot tin roof it evaporates almost immediately and is set to start all over again. Other drops may soak into the ground and evaporate or be taken up by plants to transpire into the air over the course of days or weeks. Still other drops may flow into rives or lakes or oceans where the time to evaporation is years to hundreds of years. Water falling as snow onto glaciers and the antarctic may be tied up as ice for thousands of years, water seeping into deep underground reservoirs may be there as long as 10,000 years.
water returns by the water process( first: precipitation second:evaporation then condensation) basically it rains or whatever then it gets soaked up by the sun and then it rains again the same water that was soaked up
You leave the water out to evaporate and then it will leave behind the chalk.
can take as long as 17 years
I boil tap water in three gallon stainless steel container and each time the water cools a fair amount of white mineral precipitates - Ca + Mg - collecting on the interior surface of the container, also a fai amount freely precipitates and collects at the bottom of the container. I have drank the water for years.
Rosin flux will probably last hundreds or even thousands of years. I suspect that fossil amber would work as a decent flux. The solvent in liquid organic fluxes may evaporate, leaving a solid. Some paste fluxes are water based and the water will evaporate.
yes but not now it will probably dry on 4 billion years when it gets too hot and it evaporates and it is going to evaporate on the air
for as long as you can keep them in a freezer
3 years
Igloo coolers is the best place to purchase a large sized water container. They have them from small all the way to extra large. Igloo has always made a high quality product that lasts for years.
If they get close enough to the Sun - which is when they are best visible - the water will gradually evaporate; the comet will disintegrate within a very short time (perhaps a few thousand years).
The sun creates heat and makes the water evaporate, turning the water into moisture, which rises into the air, creates clouds, and makes it rain. This is the water cycle. By the way, I'm eleven years old.
well it would have to have water and if it had water then all the things in the air would probably go away because the water would evaporate making it rain and that will evaporate and so on the sky will get blue er and mars will have a atmosphere and that how but it will take billions of years for all of that to happen so if I'm wrong please someone put something better i hope this helps
can take as long as 17 years