if its hot it will slightly but it wont affect the lakes overall volume
the source that makes water evaporate is evaporation from the sun
when the water is in the lake,river etc.when the sun rays falls directly to the water the water becomes steam and evaporate
The heat from Sun favors water evaporation.
Water leaves lakes all the time in the form of evaporation. If the lake level rises beyong the normal banks, the lake will overflow. If you are pumping water out of a lake, that is called using the water.
The emptying of a large lake would be part of the water cycle through the process of evaporation and precipitation. When the water from the lake evaporates, it becomes water vapor in the atmosphere, eventually leading to condensation and precipitation, which can fall back into the lake or elsewhere as rain or snow. This completes the water cycle for that specific body of water.
It gets it entirely from the sun.
Evaporation is an exothermic process; the heat is released in the atmosphere.
There is a channel....a opening where the salt water can enter An inland lake can also be salty if mineral deposits under the lake contain salt, or the lake has only inflowing water and no out-flowing water. Overtime the inflow will bring minerals into the lake, without a way for the water to exit the lake, the waters of the lake will evaporate naturally, leaving the deposited minerals, increasing the water's salinity.
Heat the water. Allow it to evaporate leaving behind the salt. Remove the solid salt. Refill the lake. Prevent the salt from ebing readded by water inflow carrying minerals.
It depends. The lake may have experienced lots of rain, and therefore grow, or water may evaporate from it, and it will get smaller.
Yes, salt can evaporate from water. When water evaporates, it leaves behind the salt, which does not evaporate.
The vapor pressure of a warm lake is higher than that of a cold lake because higher temperatures increase the kinetic energy of water molecules, causing them to evaporate more easily and increase the pressure of water vapor above the lake's surface.