This is known as pore water. If the soil or rock is in-situ (in other words in the ground) it may also be known as ground water.
The area underground where rainwater collects in the spaces between rock particles is called the "zone of saturation" or the "water table." This is where groundwater accumulates and flows through the pores and spaces in the rock or sediment.
Water that soaks into the ground and collects in pores in soil and rock becomes groundwater. Groundwater is water that has infiltrated the soil and rocks below the Earth's surface, filling the spaces between particles or within cracks and cavities. It is an important water source for wells and springs.
Even raindrops can start erosion that can move rocks by first moving tiny particles of soil and starting paths for tiny rivulets that can become streams. The faster water in streams can pick up larger objects and move them. The action of moving water can also cause particles of suspended sand to abrade rocks and sediments, corroding and displacing them until the rocks are no longer held in place. Water that collects in cavities or cracks in underlying substrate expands when it freezes, moving rocks by upward or lateral pressure from the expansion of the ice.
an underground layer of rock that can hold water is an aquifer.
Unless any extra particles/sediments collected on the water particles(gas), they do not differ. Condensate is just when water particles(gas), have collected on an object after evaporation, and this process runs all on water. One example is when after you take a shower, the steam, (water particles/gas), collects on a mirror and drizzles down the mirror. This ends up being water!!!
The process in which water filters into the bedrock is called infiltration. This is when water soaks into the ground and moves through the spaces between rocks and soil particles.
minerals are moved by the water's pressure and when the water hits rocks it collects minerals and washes it into other places.
no its not
The force of moving water alone can wear away particles of rock.
Surface water collects in a watershed and seeps into ground
Sedimentary rocks come from deposited sediment that are cemented together (usually in water) to form these types of rocks. The rocks are made out of weared-down shells, rocks, inclusions (rock particles) and sand as well as pebbles or other particles. Hope that helps.
Water vapor collects around tiny particles, called condensation nuclei, such as dust or salt, in the atmosphere. As more water vapor condenses onto these particles, they grow in size and eventually form clouds.