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The atmosphere contains tiny soil particles called?
dust?
Sediments, such as silt, sand, and gravel.
When water evaporates, it is generally quite pure, but while suspended in the atmosphere, it is exposed to dust particles that become part of the condensate, so the resulting water is not pure, but contaminated with the solid particles that are in the atmosphere in the same vicinity.
Answer this question… Earth's atmosphere is 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 0.9% argon, and 0.03% carbon dioxide with very small percentages of other elements. Our atmosphere also contains water vapor. In addition, Earth's atmosphere contains traces of dust particles, pollen, plant grains and other solid particles.
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The atmosphere contains tiny soil particles called?
dust?
Solid particles such as dust get into the air when wind picks them up and carries them. Other particles such as salt are picked up by ocean spray.
Sediments, such as silt, sand, and gravel.
Particles are needed because then the water vapor can condense on them
Particulate Matter
Yes, that is correct. There are tiny suspended particles in the atmosphere. There is usually some dust, but if there is smoke in the air, the amount of such particles can increase a lot.
When water evaporates, it is generally quite pure, but while suspended in the atmosphere, it is exposed to dust particles that become part of the condensate, so the resulting water is not pure, but contaminated with the solid particles that are in the atmosphere in the same vicinity.
no but the particles in a solid vibrate
how do particles behave in a solid state
liquid particles do not join the solid particles because the particles of solid are very tightly packed but this is not in the case of liquid