As soon as someones mouth touches the bottle, bacteria is present. Allowed to sit for a couple of days, the water will "foul"...(develop an unfresh taste). Refridgeration helps delay this fouling process whilst direct sunlight and heat will hasten it. Bottles that have been LEFT OPEN for days or weeks may have additional contaminants introduced to them, and, if ingested may cause mild diarrhea. Keeping open bottles "cool" will cause no problems.
Technically yes. But the amount that can escape via the plastic and the seal is so small that the practical answer is no.
Water evaporate faster in an opened water bottle.
If the bottle is very good sealed evaporation is impossible.
no , becase it cannot pass through
Yes, when the bottle is not closed.
Yes water can evaporate in a covered bowl and it can even evaporate in a covered bowl in the shade overnight.
yes it can. lemon water also.
yes
Yes Water can evaporate inside. Have you ever taken a really hot shower and then your mirror fogs up? That's because the water was hot enough to evaporate then condensed on your mirror.
Evaporate the liquid, possibly by heating it.
hot and sunny
Yes because there is more surface area for the water to evaporate.
The water on the tray will evaporate faster - more exposed surface.
An unopened water bottle contains a small pocket of air, allowing it to float. If the water bottle were to have this air removed, its buoyancy would be determined by the purity of the water inside and outside of the plastic.
condensation. trust me!
Can I return an unopened bottle of alcohol.
This depends on many factors.
1969 bottle unopened carleton canadian whiskey
Around $12.50 for an unopened 8oz bottle.
An unopened bottle has an indefinite shelf life.
It depends what it is covered with. If it is covered with a cloth then, as the cloth is porous, the water will evaporate. If however you cover the bowl with something that seals the top (makes it air tight), it will not evaporate.
Because there is more water exposed to the air at once