Evaporation increase with the increase of temperature.
A high temperature or a low pressure favors evaporation.
Yes, a low pressure favors evaporation.
the water in the glass evaporates if the atmosphere temperature is at evaporating point of water
It is good for the sun to make water evaporate. It's part of the water cycle, and water is taken up into clouds and goes into other places filling lakes, high places and reservoirs, where water wouldn't show up otherwise. Much of the world's fresh water(non salted) comes from the water cycle. It also cleans out the atmosphere when it rains leaving fewer pollutants in the air.
292 kj
At normal atmospheric pressure, it is 100 deg C. However, water will evaporate at a much lower temperature.
The needed energy at 100 oC is 48751 MJ.
yes, but make sure it's not too shallow for too much water can evaporate due to the hot weather.
This will depend on how much vinegar you are looking to have evaporate. Vinegar is a mixture of acetic acid and water. Acetic acid will evaporate faster than water at a rate of .97.
This depends on many factors.
That depends how much water, and what is the initial temperature.
it depends on the temp.
a puddle of water will evaporate faster because it has a larger surface area that is, it has more of its moleccules in contact with the air Yes, the more air the same amount of water can cover, the faster it will evaporate. In a glass, there is much water that gets tiny amounts of air under the surface and not enough to evaporate. If the same amount of water was poured on a level flat surface (no puddle), it would evaporate very quickly.
If you continue to boil water for 2 hours, or any extended length of time, it will evaporate, i.e. turn to steam (water vapor). Depending on how much water you have to begin with, and how long it let it boil, it could all evaporate, or only some will evaporate.
It depends on the temperature.
a few days or weeks. It might even take months depending on how hot the lamp is and how much cold water you're trying to evaporate.
let the water evaporate and measure the salt that is left in the jar
That depends on how large the puddle is - how wide and how deep and how much water is in the puddle.
the water in the glass evaporates if the atmosphere temperature is at evaporating point of water