land loses heat faster than H20
It absorbs heat faster
No. They gain.
It is a combination of both. Oceans gain water from water that runs off from land and from precipitation that falls on them. But they also lose water due to evaporation.
Soil is solid. Its molecules are close to one another so it heats faster. It also cools faster. Water is liquid. Molecules in liquids are farther apart so water heats more slowly............ Andre Ü
A material must gain energy both before and during melting.
It absorbs heat faster
bodies of water tend to have more object in and animals that produce their own heat. it also absorbs heat faster than land. water actually would lose heat faster if it didn't gain it faster. It's a more precarious kind of substance than earth is. but heat from the light reflecting off the moon and the fish in the water slow the temperature drop.
For what?It requires a heat gain for the water,but a heat loss for whatever the water is in contact with.
25 times faster
The specific heat of both are essentially the same. i.e. it doesn't.
25 times faster
Soil absorbs heat much faster than water, but water does not have air in between like soil so it doesnt lose heat as fast, so water holds heat longer
removed. The heat in the glass is being extracted causing the outside of the glass to have water on it.
It is endothermic. Endothermic is to gain heat and Exothermic is to lose heat.
lose because of osmosis:) your welcome.
the material can gain or lose heat easily
If you mean Metals... No, they do not gain electrons, they actually lose electrons because it is a lot easy for them to lose them so they can gain stability much faster.