The water cycle.
plants release extra water in the form of water vapour from small holes of their leaves known as stomata ,that water vapour rises in the atmosphere in the form of clouds and that water vapour returns to earth in form of rain .
CloudsThe rain comes from the clouds which has water in the form of water vapour .These water vapour condenses due to low temperature in the atmosphere and come to earth as rain or in any other way of precipitation
Earth recycles it's water by the Water Cylce. The Sun's heat heats the water causing it to evaporate in to water vapour. It also does this to plants and that is called transpiration. As the water vapour rises it cools down and forms clouds. The clouds are moved by prevaling winds. The clouds get denser and denser and eventually falls back down as rain. The rain either runs down on the Earth's surface that is called surface run - off. Or it soaks into the ground and becomes ground water. It takes 40,000 years for the earth to recycle its own water. Without human intervention.
Yes, at which point it takes the form of precipitation and returns to the earth as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
Evaporation moves the water from the earth's surface up into the atmosphere. It helps to make the water form clouds from water vapour and condensation. It helps to convert the water vapours (its gas form) to water (its liquid form).
it's the water cycle. the water from the ocean's evaporate with the heat from the sun and go up as water-vapour. they from clouds. when the clouds pass over mountains or when the clouds become heavy, the water vapour condenses and comes down as rain.
The process that returns water to Earth is called the water cycle. This cycle involves the evaporation of water from the Earth's surface, its transformation into clouds, and then its return to the Earth through precipitation in the form of rain or snow. This continuous process helps to maintain the planet's supply of water.
The sun evaporates water from the Earth and it turns into water vapour. Water vapour rises up into the sky and forms clouds. When the clouds get heavy (means a lot of evaporation), water falls form the sky as rain. The water comes from the clouds. (clouds are not gases. They are solids)
Clouds are formed when water vapour in the air is cooled and condenses as part of watercycle.clouds consist of billions of tiny water droplets (and even ice crystals) floating in the sky and appear in variety of shapes and sizes depending on how and where they are formed.however,there are three main types of clouds.Water evaporates from lakes, rivers and oceans as well as forests. The water vapour rises into the sky. The temperature is lower as height increases and the water molecules start to condense into tiny droplets. We see these droplets as fog when they are close to the Earth but as clouds when they are above us in a layer of cold air. As more and more water vapour condenses the clouds lose their white colour and become darker until eventually the water droplets are big enough to fall back to the Earth without evaporating.Water vapour
Clouds are formed when water vapour in the air is cooled and condenses as part of watercycle.clouds consist of billions of tiny water droplets (and even ice crystals) floating in the sky and appear in variety of shapes and sizes depending on how and where they are formed.however,there are three main types of clouds.Water evaporates from lakes, rivers and oceans as well as forests. The water vapour rises into the sky. The temperature is lower as height increases and the water molecules start to condense into tiny droplets. We see these droplets as fog when they are close to the Earth but as clouds when they are above us in a layer of cold air. As more and more water vapour condenses the clouds lose their white colour and become darker until eventually the water droplets are big enough to fall back to the Earth without evaporating.Water vapour
Because heat from the sun causes water to evaporate from the seas and oceans. The water vapour cools, and condenses into clouds - falling back to earth as rain. It's a continuous cycle.
The water vapor condenses as it cools, and forms clouds. It later returns to the Earth as precipitation.