Water tends to evaporate.
Evaporation is the primary process that causes a puddle to dry up. Heat from the sun causes the water in the puddle to change from liquid to vapor, which then rises into the atmosphere. As more water evaporates, the level of the puddle decreases until it eventually dries up completely.
A puddle dries up after it rains due to evaporation. The sun's heat causes water molecules on the surface of the puddle to turn into vapor, which then escapes into the air, gradually reducing the water level in the puddle until it eventually dries up.
evaporation, where water molecules at the surface of the puddle gain enough energy to escape into the air as vapor. This continues until all the water has evaporated, leaving the puddle dry.
Dry
Puddles of water on the ground dry up due to evaporation. The sun's heat causes the water molecules on the surface of the puddle to gain enough energy to escape into the air as water vapor, leading to the gradual disappearance of the puddle.
Unless the dry ice is under pressure, it will "sublime" and change from a solid to a gas. Therefore, there will be no "puddle".
Puddles dry up when the water in them evaporates into the air or seeps into the ground. Factors like temperature, humidity, and wind speed can affect how quickly a puddle dries up.
because i am super gr8 and awesome
"Evaporates".
Well, this would depend on several factors:Location- warmer region would dry up faster. Shelter/surrounding vegetation would also affect the evaporation rateVolume- the deeper the pond the less likely it will dry up- the greater the surface area the more likely it will. A shallow puddle and a narrow tube filled with the same volume of water would not dry up at the same rate- the puddle would firstTime of year- summer is when the pond will most likely dry up. Temporary ponds dry up in the summer and fill up again in the autumn/winter.Taking the above into account, I would say an average temporary pond (most ponds don't dry up completely anyway) would take a few weeks, at its peak rate, to dry up. However, whenever there is hot weather the pond water will begin to evaporate, but this evaporation is not consistent- but rather the rate increases the closer you get to the middle of summer.Hope this helps! :)
Evaporation. If a puddle goes dry the water evaporated.
I tripped and the puddle was there. Then, i got wet. But a hot boy helped me up so not all was bad.