Water can chemically weather rocks by dissolving minerals, water can also physically weather rocks by fracturing them by hydraulic pressure or frost wedging.
It when water goes into the rock and then the water freezes and break the rock
Wind and water
water erosion
Erosion is the main force that acts on rocks to break them down into sand. Water getting into cracks, freezing and expanding also helps to break down rocks.
Two processes that can break down rocks are weathering, which is the breakdown of rocks into smaller pieces by natural elements like sunlight, water, and wind, and erosion, which is the transport of these smaller rock fragments by forces like water, ice, or wind.
Water erosion
the process is called weathering when the rocks break down
Erosion is the wearing away of rocks by wind and water, which causes them to break down and form soil.
Oxygen oxidizes, water vapor condenses.
Water can chemically weather rocks by dissolving minerals, water can also physically weather rocks by fracturing them by hydraulic pressure or frost wedging.
Humans break down rocks through mechanical and chemical weathering processes. Mechanical weathering involves physical forces like wind, water, and ice breaking down rocks into smaller pieces. Chemical weathering involves chemical reactions that break down the minerals in rocks, often aided by factors like water, acids, or living organisms. Over time, these weathering processes contribute to the breakdown and erosion of rocks into soil.
Magnetic force does not break down rocks in nature. Rocks are typically broken down by mechanical weathering (e.g. frost wedging, root growth) and chemical weathering (e.g. oxidation, dissolution).