Puddles are made of water. When the sun comes out after a rainstorm, the sun's rays of light have energy which then shines into the puddles. When liquid water receives enough energy from the sun light, it will turn into water in GAS form which then evaporates into the sky. So, puddles basically turn into gaseous water vapor because of sunlight.
Water evaporates when it gets warm and turns into a gas. When water is cooled, it freezes and turns to ice. Water in a small, shallow puddle warms up relatively fast, evaporates and turns to gas.
The water in puddles will evaporate as long as they are not covered with oil or frozen. They will also try to soak in to the surface underneath them. It depends on the surface as to whether this will happen or not (dirt: yes, Concrete: yes, asphalt: no, tar: no).
Some evaporated into the air, some absorbed into the soil.
Evaporation.
evaporation
evaporation
Evaporation
Evaporation.
Some of the water evaporates, and some of it drains away through the soil.
in the sun
Evaporation
Heat energy from the sun and the ground cause puddles to evaporate. The heat energy breaks the hydrogen bonds between the water molecules and when the water molecules are heated to a high enough temperature, they will leave the puddle, forming water vapor.
a warm wind makes snow on the ground disappear but no puddles form
the water in the puddles had turned into frozen water, or ice
it condensed into a gas
Heyy, Well the water gets evaporated into the clouds and stay in the clouds until they are filled with water so thats how it starts raining. Or the water sinks into the ground (depending on the type, if it's dirt or cement)
Erosion by both wind and water.
Evaporation occurs as sun shines on puddles. The heat evaporates the water.
Water puddles along the road evaporate because of the heat energy from the sun. On a cloudy day, puddles will stick around longer.