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Condensation. And before this: water turns into water vapor-evaporation After condensation: clouds holding the water lets go-precipitaion= snow, sleet, hail, and rain. After precipitation: Run-off=water goes back to its original place (or other places).
evaporation is when hot water (liquid) rise to form something else Evaporation only occurs at the surface of a liquid and does not need any external heat source. The molecules of liquid spontaneously go into the vapour phase as long as the pressure above the liquid does not exceed what is called the saturation vapor pressure. As a result, the temperature of the liquid decreases. That is the reason you sweat, perspiration is the way by which your body reduces its temperature. Improved By:Bluefzero153627
it depends on the current humidity, if the humidity is high the water will have trouble evaporating because it has no where to go, temperature and atmospheric pressure also play some part.
By the water cycle, I suspect you mean evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff. Evaporation is the change from water to water vapor, lifting into the sky, where condensation occurs. What condensation is, is the act of turning the water vapor into large fog banks, called clouds. When precipitation comes around, all the water in the clouds falls in some sort of water (ex. rain, snow, hail, etc.). Runoff is simply the act of the water getting back into rivers, streams, creeks, lakes, and of course oceans. I hope this is what you where looking for! LexaBookworm
Evaporated molecules of water go up.
o Evaporation, water vapor and sun o Condensation and clouds o Precipitation and the 4 major kinds of precipitation o Groundwater
Condensation. And before this: water turns into water vapor-evaporation After condensation: clouds holding the water lets go-precipitaion= snow, sleet, hail, and rain. After precipitation: Run-off=water goes back to its original place (or other places).
Water Vapor enters the air by something called "evaporation process". Water evaporates from bodies of water and such and transpiration is the water vapor that plants give off, so to describe the full process of how water vapor enters the air, they combine both and get the term evaporation process !sincerely,Menna loves.
evaporation there you go
it is called evaporation because the sun makes the water go in the air and then it will go up in a cloud and when it has to much water in that certain cloud it will rain............yall is so slow
The processes that occur in the water cycle: precipitation: when liquid or solid water falls from clouds transpiration: water evaporating out of plants condensation: when water vapor changes into liquid evaporation: when liquid becomes gas
Clouds travel with the wind. They remain clouds until the water vapor becomes precipitation. The water cycle goes: evaporation, condensation, precipitation. Water evaporates and condenses into clouds, and then it precipitates (rain, sleet, snow).
The higher the temp, the more water air can hold, which is why a cold front often brings rain.
Water vapor triggers convection currents that can form clouds.
By how wind and water vapor appear. If you know the water cycle, evaporation make water into a gas. then wind would "blow" the cloud like gas to where it would go( Pacific Ocean to New York).
The water level goes up when it rains, and also air temperature in clouds. In effect, "heat went up when rain came down", because water vapor in clouds had to condense into drops. That released heat energy into the clouds. The air temperature in clouds must go up when rain condenses out. Water in the soil or in lakes will eventually evaporate (perhaps through leaves). That evaporation absorbs heat from the soil, lakes and vegetation. Rising water vapor returns the heat to the clouds. The water vapor could not rise if prior rain had not "made room for it". So in effect, "rain (plus evaporation and rising water vapor) transferred heat up".
Water systems travel through the nonliving part of an ecosystem through evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.