Evaporation is slow vaporization of a liquid and the reverse of condensation. An example is when it rains there are puddles on the ground, but then they suddenly dissapear, this is called evaporation, because the water molecules have evaporated and gone into the autmosphere, and the start to form into clouds, then after this proccess of evaporation happens we now have the process of Condensation which in other words mean that after the water evaporated demostration evaporation making little/big clouds in the sky now the cloads will have rain and the water that dried will be rain, snow, hail, or other things in which water is used. And so the process of evaporation and condensation will continue all over again.
A puddle of water drying up in the sun is a good example of evaporation.
After it rains, the rainwater on the roads disappear. This is an example of evaporation.
Evaporation is an example of change of phase.
An example is evaporation of water during cooking.
A puddle dries up on a sunny day.
Milk. Yes.
For example a solid from a liquid; evaporation of water from sea waters give salt.
Yes, the type of container can affect evaporation. For example, a sealed container will slow down evaporation compared to an open container. Additionally, materials like glass or metal can also affect evaporation rates compared to porous materials like paper or cloth.
puddles that dust came from rain
Evaporation
Evaporation is used effectively in an evaporation cooler.
No, it is an example of precipitation
distillation
A banana is a good non-example. Evaporation is a process whereas a banana is an object, and so clearly a non-example.
Puddles drying up in the sun is clearly an example of evaporation.
No.
No, boiling water is the best example of evaporation along with any form of steam production. Answer In relation to the ice cube which will first produce water. It will be the water that evaporates. When an ice cube is placed in a warm room it becomes coated with a layer of water, it is no longer a true ice cube.
condensation, evaporation, precipitation, etc(:
is is evaporation
condensation
no
state of matter