It depends on the type of water. Regular water can't damage your skin, but, with some people, chlorinated water can damage your skin.
No, water does not have skin. Skin is a protective outer layer that covers living organisms, while water is a liquid substance that does not have a skin.
It's skin is simply permeable to water so the water is 'soaked' into the skin.
Yes, skin does remove water from the body
The skin on a film of water is called surface tension. It is caused by the cohesive forces between water molecules.
Yes, skin can float on water due to its density being lower than that of water. This is why skin can sometimes form a thin layer on the surface of water, especially when oils or lotions are present on the skin.
No. As they are reptiles the skin of water moccasins is largely waterproof.
Drinking water automatically leaves your skin glowing and make the skin healthy..
You have hairs all over your body that hold the water on your skin.
Water may not soak into your skin immediately due to the presence of a thin layer of oil on the surface of your skin, which acts as a barrier to water penetration. Additionally, the outermost layer of skin, called the stratum corneum, is designed to be water-resistant to prevent excessive water loss from the body. If you stay in water for a prolonged period of time, then the water may eventually penetrate through the skin.
it's the same as when ever a person gets water on their skin. Skin is waterproof.
water...........water and water
no it does not turn to water