no groundwater in general dos not involve water vapor as groundwater is liquid water not gaseous water (water vapor).
ocean water evaporates,leaving salt behind
The hydrosphere encompasses all liquid and frozen surface water, groundwater, and water vapor found on Earth. It includes oceans, lakes, rivers, glaciers, and underground aquifers, as well as atmospheric water in the form of clouds and water vapor.
Water on Earth can be found in oceans, rivers, lakes, glaciers, ice caps, groundwater, and as vapor in the atmosphere.
Water vapor doesn't just stay over the ocean because of wind patterns and atmospheric conditions. The movement of air masses and the Earth's rotation cause the water vapor to be carried away from the ocean and distributed across different regions, leading to weather patterns and precipitation.
Water vapor doesn't stay over the ocean because it is constantly moving and being carried by winds to different areas. The water vapor eventually condenses and forms clouds, which can then release precipitation in the form of rain or snow.
Sublimation is a process that does not involve water vapor. Sublimation is the transition of a substance directly from the solid phase to the gas phase without passing through the liquid phase, such as when dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) turns into carbon dioxide gas.
Water evaporates from the ocean due to solar energy, forming water vapor in the atmosphere. This vapor condenses to form clouds, which can lead to precipitation over land. The water then runs off into rivers or infiltrates into the ground, where it can be taken up by plants or stored as groundwater before eventually flowing back to the ocean.
ocean water evaporates,leaving salt behind
ocean water evaporates,leaving salt behind
If the groundwater is boiling, then yes. Otherwise, probably not. (The bubbles in boiling water are made of liquid water that has rapidly evaporated into water vapor gas.)
The hydrosphere encompasses all liquid and frozen surface water, groundwater, and water vapor found on Earth. It includes oceans, lakes, rivers, glaciers, and underground aquifers, as well as atmospheric water in the form of clouds and water vapor.
The water got in the ocean by the volcano's exploding and the vapor got in the ocean and that created the ocean water.
water vapor comes from the ocean water when it goes through evaporation.
The vapor rising from the hot cup of tea was visible in the cool morning air.
The clouds are formed by water vapor evaporating from the ocean. The water vapor condenses and falls again as rain (or snow) thereby completing the water cycle.
Water on Earth can be found in oceans, rivers, lakes, glaciers, ice caps, groundwater, and as vapor in the atmosphere.
In a packed or tray column where you have vapor flowing up and liquid flowing down, there is an upper limit to how fast the liquid can drain downwards. The point at which liquid cannot flow down as fast as it is coming into the column is the "flooding point". The actual flooding point is partly dependent on how fast the liquid can flow down with no vapor flowing upwards and the rate at which vapor is trying to flow upwards. Cross sections of the column occupied by vapor are not available for liquid flow - effectively reducing the cross-section for downward flow of the liquid. You also get entrainment of liquid in the upward flowing vapor and drag on the liquid as it fights the direction of the vapor flow - the vapor wants to go up while the liquid wants to go down. This additional drag also slows down the flow of liquid trying to drain downward in the column. There is an analogous condition for two-phase liquid/liquid extraction columns.