Evaporation is an exothermic process; the heat is released in the atmosphere.
It gets it entirely from the sun.
This is the thermal energy from sun.
Adding thermal energy increase the evaporation.
On a warm and windy day, you would expect the most evaporation to take place from a lake. The warmth provides the necessary energy for the water to evaporate, while the wind helps to remove the water vapor from the lake's surface, increasing the rate of evaporation.
Water is not the most quickest liquid to evaporate.
Frozen Lake
In most cases, I figure it'd be the sun.
Ones with the most energy
The stage in the water cycle where the sun's energy is most critical is evaporation. The sun's heat causes water to change from liquid to vapor, which is essential for water to evaporate from bodies of water like oceans, lakes, and rivers.
Most water is evaporated from oceans.
Solar energy is the primary source of energy that drives the evaporation of water from Earth's surface. Solar radiation heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate and enter the atmosphere as water vapor. Wind and temperature also play a role in the rate of evaporation.
These are the oceans.