It could take between one and four months for a cup of water to evaporate indoors at 65 degrees depending on the surface area and the humidity.
If you mean, when will the entire cup evaporate, you are supposed to divide 1 by 1/3.
no it cant i might in maybe a week
depends on the - surface ares of the water temperature of liquid at the start of your experiment if there is a draught of air across the liquid surface it would increase the rate of evaporation also if the cup is indoors or out doors if its cloudy.... overall to be honest i think its unlikley
Only the water will evaporate(unless its like 300 degrees F lol) There should be like a dried residue left behind (this first part, I'm not sure about) but I do know for sure that it depends relative humidity, temperature and a bunch of other stuff
The time it takes for a cup of boiling water to evaporate on the stove depends on factors like the heat setting, pan size, and humidity. On average, it can take around 10-20 minutes for a cup of boiling water to completely evaporate in a small to medium-sized pan.
The salt will dissolve in the water, the water will evaporate and is turned to water vapor(steam) and the salt will be the only one left behind in the cup.
you need a cup. it should be one you can see through. then, you fill it about 1/4 of the way with water. cover the top of the cup with foil of plastic wrap, then heat up the cup. the water will evaporate into the cover of the cup, and form a cloud before raining down!
Put 2 cups outside on a sunny day. One with salt water and one with regular water. Check on them every 5 minutes or just watch them. Then you time how long the salt water took to evaporate compared against how long it took the regular water to evaporate. Then you'll have your answer.
The time it takes for 1 cup of water to evaporate depends on various factors such as temperature, humidity, surface area, and airflow. In a typical room temperature environment with moderate humidity and no direct heat source, it could take several hours for 1 cup of water to completely evaporate. However, if the water is exposed to higher temperatures or increased airflow, the evaporation process could occur more quickly, potentially within an hour or less.
Water evaporate quickly.
One month.
Many liquids evaporate, one example is water