Yes, a higher temperature increase the rate of evaporation.
Dont get me wrong, but you seem to be asking how to separate salt from water. I think if you evaporate water, the salt cannot evaporate, and it stays behind. However, if the light is really hot, it will evaporate the salt along with the water. (Example: If you put salt and water in a dish and hold it on top of a lit candle, the light is hot enough to evaporate water, but not hot enough to evaporate salt.
Heating favors evaporation.
Because humidity means there is a lot of water vapor in the air, and thus, water cannot evaporate, as there is no room for it in the air.
Hot day
Water absorbs heat from its surroundings - causing it to evaporate... taking the heat with it.
They all evaporate, but the hot water will evaporate the fastest.
Type your answer here... hot water will evaporate faster than hot sprite because hot water does not have any menerals in it
The water will not "disappear"; it will evaporate. If it's hot, water will evaporate faster.
Dont get me wrong, but you seem to be asking how to separate salt from water. I think if you evaporate water, the salt cannot evaporate, and it stays behind. However, if the light is really hot, it will evaporate the salt along with the water. (Example: If you put salt and water in a dish and hold it on top of a lit candle, the light is hot enough to evaporate water, but not hot enough to evaporate salt.
Because it is hot in Niger.
hot and sunny
the water may evaporate
it will evaporate it
it is conducting the heat away
Heating favors evaporation.
No, its too hot all the water would evaporate.
The molecules in hot water have more kinetic energy than those in warm or cold water, and thus makes it easier for those molecules to escape into the vapor phase (evaporate).