This is thermal radiation of the Sun.
The energy that drives the water cycle is from the Sun.
the undersea volcanoes.
The stages of the water cycle are evaporation (water turning into vapor), condensation (vapor turning into clouds), precipitation (rain, sleet, or snow falling from clouds), and collection (water returning to oceans, rivers, and lakes). The energy driving the water cycle primarily comes from the sun, which heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate.
Source of energy is the sun.
Earth's interior.
from the wind
Yes, it does because the suns rays heat the the water so that is can evaporate
The energy that drives the water cycle is from the Sun.
The water cycle requires heat energy. It comes from sun.
The main source of heat is from the sun.
99.9% of Earth's energy comes from the Sun. It is usual, especially in the natural water cycle for the energy to evaporate water to come from the Sun. Of course you could also use the heat from a nuclear reactor.
No, water does not need sunlight to evaporate. The primary factor that drives evaporation is heat energy, which can come from various sources, not just sunlight. Evaporation occurs when water molecules gain enough energy to escape from the liquid and enter the air as a gas.
The energy comes from the Sun, which heats the surface of the water, causing the water molecules to gain enough kinetic energy to break free from the liquid state and evaporate into the atmosphere.
Technically, hydroelectric energy ultimately comes from the sun. This is because the sun's energy heats up water, moving water through the water cycle. Hydroelectric energy is generated by harnessing the power created by the movement of this water.
the undersea volcanoes.
Primarily, from the sun.
Water for clouds typically comes from evaporation of water on the Earth's surface, such as from oceans, lakes, and rivers. The sun's heat causes water to evaporate and rise into the atmosphere where it cools and forms clouds through condensation.