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Land tends to change temperature more rapidly than water. This is because land has a lower specific heat capacity compared to water, meaning it requires less energy to change its temperature. As a result, land can heat up and cool down more quickly than water.
the temperature drops rapidly :)
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).
The process of water changing into a liquid is called condensation. This is why there is dew in the morning
depends on the temperature outside
Land tends to change temperature more rapidly than water. This is because land has a lower specific heat capacity compared to water, meaning it requires less energy to change its temperature. As a result, land can heat up and cool down more quickly than water.
Freezing occurs without any change in temperature. A liquid at freezing temperature becomes a solid at freezing temperature.
the temperature drops rapidly :)
Land hearts up & cools down quickly compared to water. It is rapidly by changes in the amount of sunlight & the air temperature
Condensation occurs when water changes from gas to a liquid.
evaporation
The process when water changes into a gas is called evaporation. Evaporation occurs for pure water at 100 degrees celsius (-173 K) when water molecules begin to move around very rapidly and split up.
The temperature usually becomes a lot warmer during a tropical storm as water vapor is transported into the troposphere. In tropical oceans, the sea surface temperature (SST) becomes warmer as the water changes rapidly in a layer of the ocean called the thermocline.
Liquid water becomes water vapor in the process of vaporization. There are two kinds of vaporization, evaporation which occurs slowly, and boiling which occurs rapidly.
a layer of water in the ocean where the temperature declines rapidly with depth
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).
Changes in both temperature and pressure induce phase changes in water (and all other materials!).