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Infiltration, Infiltration, Percolation
Infiltration is when water is going into the ground. Percolation is when water is passing the water table underground.
Infiltration and then percolation.
Percolation of soil is the infiltration of it, which is important because it determines if water placed on soil will either soak through or cause runoff or even worse erosion.
This is known as percolation or groundwater recharge.
water filling in the porous spaces of the Earth's lithosphere.
All the six Parts Of The Hydologic Cycle are: 1. Evapotranspiration. 2. Condensation. 3. Precipitation. 4. Infiltration. 5. Percolation. 6. Runoff.
Infiltration describes the movement of moisture from the surface into the ground. Percolation is the word used to describe the movement of a fluid through a porous and permeable medium such as soil.
Percolation rate is the gradual movement and filtering of water through the spaces or pores in the soil usually expressed as inches per hour or inches per day. A soil with a greater percolation rate can usually absorb more water.
Percolation produces groundwater.
Evaporation (from rivers, lakes, seas etc), followed by condensation (as clouds) then precipitation (rain etc) followed by various forms of infiltration, percolation and other such lovelies to deliver the water back to the bodies from which it gets evaporated :)
Both terms phlebitis and infiltration are terms related to Intravenous. Infiltration is the situation when fluid from the IV leaks from the vein into the surrounding tissue. Phlebitis is the actual irritation that occurs in the vein and surrounding tissues.