Sometimes yes and sometimes no.
It depends on many factors, and temperature is probably the most important.
Both. The speedier one leave (evaporate) while the ones left behind slow down.
Putting your birdbath in a place that is shaded will slow the evaporation of the water.
No. Triton is sandy-pink to beige. It also consists of slow-evaporating nitrogen ice which gives it a dirty-white streak around the equator.
In a given liquid, the atoms or molecules which are moving the fastest, and hence have the highest temperature, are the ones that are most likely to leave the liquid and evaporate. The atoms or molecules that they leave behind will therefore be cooler. Examples: evaporating water evaporating alcohol evaporating liquid nitrogen evaporating glycerol evaporating liquid helium evaporating acetone.
Water in an open system is allways evaporated.
melting(not meting i supose)=solid to liquid evaporating=liquid to gas ;)
So that the substance in the evaporation dish is fully protected with the glass! The evaporating dish is used to heat and evaporate liquids. This porcelain item resembles a shallow bowl with a spout. Evaporating dishes are traditionally used to evaporate solvent to concentrate a solution; however they can also be used to hold sand for a sand bath, as a small water bath, or as a drying dish (like a watch glass). If heated by a direct flame, it will often be placed on a clay triangle for support. Thank you for your time! peace.....
evaporating
You can call evaporating water by a number of names, but the most common are water vapor and steam.
By evaporating the sea water. What remains is salt.
Rubbing alcohol evaporating is absorbing energy. As the rubbing alcohol transitions from a liquid to a vapor state, it needs to overcome the intermolecular forces holding the liquid together, which requires energy input.
condensation