Basically, water evaporates off the sea and becomes water vapour. The water vapour rises and becomes clouds. The clouds rain onto the land, and the rain water runs into rivers and eventually into the sea, to begin the water cycle all over again. Some rain water seeps into the ground and adds to the water table. Some water, naturally, rains down on the sea.
The change of water to water vapor is reversible, as water vapor can condense back into liquid water through a process called condensation. This cycle of evaporation and condensation is part of the water cycle.
A type of change that does not occur in the water cycle is the transformation of matter into a different chemical element. In the water cycle, water remains as H2O molecules throughout the various processes such as evaporation, condensation, and precipitation, without changing its fundamental composition.
The phase change of water graph shows the relationship between temperature and state of water. It includes the three main phases of water: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (steam). The graph illustrates how water transitions between these phases with changes in temperature and pressure.
Evaporation and precipitation.
It is the circular path of water in its various phases that gives the hydrological cycle its form cycle...
The two phases of the water cycle that are repeated are evaporation and condensation. Evaporation occurs when water changes from liquid to vapor, typically due to heat, and condensation is when water vapor changes back into liquid form to become clouds or fog. This cycle of evaporation and condensation repeats continuously in the water cycle.
The three phases of the water cycle are evaporation (water turning into vapor), condensation (vapor turning into water droplets), and precipitation (water falling from clouds as rain, snow, sleet, etc.). The driving force behind the water cycle is the sun, which provides the energy needed for evaporation to occur.
The whole cycle is called water cycle. Water travels through biosphere.
condensation, precipitation, and condensation
The water cycle functions due to the continuous change in the state of water between liquid, solid, and gas. Water evaporates from bodies of water, condenses into clouds, falls back to Earth as precipitation, and runs off into rivers and oceans, completing the cycle. These changes in matter drive the movement of water throughout the environment.
Water is (of course) the main part of the water cycle. As you can see in the picture, (ps thanks to osovo.com who owns this pic) water is what flows throughout the cycle.
The water cycle is also known as the hydrological cycle or H20 cycle describes