Evaporate is the missing word.
The enthalpy of vaporization for water is 40,65 kJ/mol.
Puddles evaporate due to the random movement of some of the atoms. This causes some of the atoms to reach their "boiling point". Once this happens the molocules evaporate and then the puddle cools down. Eventually the puddle warms up due to the warmer suroundings. Then the particles warm up so they start to move and then some of them reach teir "boiling point", these molocules then evaporate. This cycle is repeated over and over again until the puddle has completely evaporated.Because of the heat the particles get smaller and smaller until you can't see them
It's a combination of absorption and evaporation. The surface the puddle is on is likely to be porous - thus some water will drain away. The surface area of a puddle is quite large - in relation to the amount of water in it. This means that heat from the sun - even a small amount - is enough to allow water to evaporate.
Snow can disappear without leaving a puddle because when the snow melts it evaporates into the air..when something evaporates that means like it goes back to the clouds where it came from...like an example would be ...have you ever seen steam coming out of a pot while you were boiling water? that smokey looking stuff is the same as evaporation...such as when the bottom of the pot gets hot the water on the top begins to evaporate it is the samr as with snow say if the snow hit the cement or sand if either the sand or sidewalk was hot and or warm then the snow or water will evaporate but if it is cold (or the water is not boiling:)) then it will stay still and take longer to evaporate that is why most of the time snow will leave no puddle..............also sorry for such a long text
That depends on how large the puddle is - how wide and how deep and how much water is in the puddle.
After a rainstorm the puddle will start to evaporate until it is no longer there.
Water tends to evaporate.
Evaporate is the missing word.
It will evaporate
a puddle of water will evaporate faster because it has a larger surface area that is, it has more of its moleccules in contact with the air Yes, the more air the same amount of water can cover, the faster it will evaporate. In a glass, there is much water that gets tiny amounts of air under the surface and not enough to evaporate. If the same amount of water was poured on a level flat surface (no puddle), it would evaporate very quickly.
if it is in the sunlight, it will gradually evaporate and disappear
A higher area of water is exposed to atmosphere.
No, evaporation is endothermic as the liquid needs to absorb energy to evaporate
The enthalpy of vaporization for water is 40,65 kJ/mol.
Puddles evaporate due to the random movement of some of the atoms. This causes some of the atoms to reach their "boiling point". Once this happens the molocules evaporate and then the puddle cools down. Eventually the puddle warms up due to the warmer suroundings. Then the particles warm up so they start to move and then some of them reach teir "boiling point", these molocules then evaporate. This cycle is repeated over and over again until the puddle has completely evaporated.Because of the heat the particles get smaller and smaller until you can't see them
On a boiling hot day it would take about 10-15 minutes but on quite breezy days it would take 1-1 and a half hours I think.