it evaporates and then goes up into the sky that is why we have a water cycle
Yes, the sun affects water through processes like evaporation, which is when the sun heats up water causing it to turn into vapor. The sun is also a major factor in the water cycle, driving the movement of water around the Earth through processes like precipitation and transpiration.
Everything will dry up in the sun. Even you! However, grapes are known for drying up into raisins, and plums for drying up into prunes.
The Sun provides energy for liquid water to become water vapor through the process of evaporation. This occurs when the Sun heats up the surface of the water, causing its molecules to gain enough energy to break free from the liquid and rise into the atmosphere.
The Sun heats the Earth's surface, causing warm air to rise. As the warm air rises, it cools, condenses, and forms clouds through the process of evaporation and condensation. The energy from the Sun is essential for driving the water cycle, leading to cloud formation.
Water is added to the atmosphere through a process called evaporation. This happens when the sun heats up water on the surface of the Earth.
Yes it could, but there isn't one close enough to the sun to suck it up and stretch into nothing.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
The sun will not suck us in because its we are to far away and its gravitational pull is not strong enough.
Sham Wows DO suck up ALL OF THE TOILET WATER!!!!!! I tried it for myself.
underneath the roots suck up the water.
The oranges suck up water and makes them juicy. When they are in the proccess of growing, they need water, so they suck that up from the trees and.... WALLA
Yes they suck it up but don't swallow it. After the water is sucked up they either splash it out onto their bodies or into their mouths.
It rains and the roots suck it up.
to suck up the water
A syringe can suck up water because when the plunger is pulled back, it creates a vacuum inside the syringe. This lower pressure causes the water to be drawn into the syringe to equalize the pressure.
Its "surface tension".
They suck it up and it stays there