Its not actually called a type of a climate but it actually creates snow and in regions like southern Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the evaporation exceeds precipitation.
A desert.
evaporation condensation precipitation there is a process that skips a step in this cycle, called SUBLIMATION, where ice turns directly into vapor, skipping the liquid stage. THere are also 3 "states" of matter: vapor, or gaseous (for water, above 100 degrees C) Liquid (for water, between 0 and 100 degrees C) Solid (for water, frozen)
In the first step the sun heats the water. The water turns into water vapor that is invisible. The water vapor rises into the sky. This is called evaporation.
Rain.Evaporation.Clouds fill up.Rain.EvaporationClouds fill up.Rain.Evaporation.Clouds fill up.evaporation--->condensation--->precipitation--->runoff--->transperationThe 3 main steps are evaporation, condensation, and presipitation. I probably didn't spell that right.....Condensation----->Precipitation------>Evaporation
The cycle of processes by which water circulates between the earth's oceans, atmosphere, and land, involving precipitation as rain and snow, drainage in streams and rivers, and return to the atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration.The process of evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and the transpiration is called the water cycle or hydrological cycle.The Hydrological Cycle (also called the water cycle) involves the continuous circulation of water through the Earth's geosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere and atmosphere.a water cycle is evaporation, condensation, and precipitation
precipitation
it is called desert because there is high level of sunshine and of course evaporation with little rain.
Humidity
evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and then its runoff
evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and then its runoff
Precipitation seeping through cracks and holes in the ground.
The characteristics of a dry climate is dry desert-like region.
This is the water cycle on the Earth.
The process is called crystallization. Methods are precipitation, melting, evaporation, deposition.
No. In the water cycle, water comes down to the ground as precipitation. Precipitation is rain, snow, sleet, or hail. Then, the water is either absorbed by plants, which is called transpiration, or is absorbed into the ground, which is called runoff. After that, the water changes into a gas, which is called evaporation. Once it is in the sky, it cools down and forms a cloud. This step is called condensation. Then, it starts all over again. Precipitation, runoff, transpiration, evaporation, condensation, precipitation, etc.
It's called the water cycle, or the hydrological cycle.
I think the word you're looking for is probably "transpiration", though "evaporation" is also a possibility.
evaporation condensation precipitation there is a process that skips a step in this cycle, called SUBLIMATION, where ice turns directly into vapor, skipping the liquid stage. THere are also 3 "states" of matter: vapor, or gaseous (for water, above 100 degrees C) Liquid (for water, between 0 and 100 degrees C) Solid (for water, frozen)