no the oxygen from the ocean comes from two things algae and plants create oxygen through photosynthisis and water is made mostly of oxygen and a bit of hydrogen
ocean currents transfer energy and climate through the sun and the ocean tide. they also transfer heat and oxygen through water currents.
The origin of oxygen (and other large elements) is from supernovae. On the smaller scale, the vast majority of our oxygen comes from ocean plants, from tiny algae to giant kelp. The atmospheric oxygen comes from the decomposition of water and carbon dioxide by organisms that use photosynthesis to make useful molecules in combination with the energy from sun light.
An oxygen form present in the ozone filters ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Conduction is the heat transfer that occurs when molecules come in contact with one another.
The sun heats the water, causing cold / hot circulation, and evaporation. It also heats the air, causing wind, which also moves currents.
The heat of the sun causes the ocean to warm, along with the sun's direct rays.
The ocean makes the sun and the air hit the water and then all the carbon dioxide is released and then oxygen is made.
No. Earth's atmosphere most likely originate from volcanic atmosphere. The oxygen is produced by plants.
examples are air rotating when heat and cold air move aroundthe sun to the ocean
the sun
Water is evaporated from the oceans by the Sun and the wind.
The equator! Its warmer there because the sun heats there more directly than anywhere else. Moistness will be above the ocean. So warm and moist air masses come from the equator over the ocean. I know this and I'm only 12!
heat
No. The sun is made almost entirely of hydrogen and oxygen and is extremely hot. Any person on the sun would be vaporized instantly.
When plants perform photosynthesis, they use carbon dioxide , water, and energy from the sun and they change carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and glucose. They don't need oxygen so they release it into the air.
Ozone (O3) forms from oxygen (O2) in the upper atmosphere and screens out most of the ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.
Well the sun actually doesn't affect us, it would affect us if it went away though. We need the sun, without it we would die. The sun provides oxygen for humans and animals, and the plants live off of the air and creates more oxygen.
ocean currents transfer energy and climate through the sun and the ocean tide. they also transfer heat and oxygen through water currents.