No. It is too dense and gets left behind
Yes, ocean water can evaporate. When the sun heats the surface of the ocean, water molecules become energized and turn into water vapor, which then rises into the atmosphere. This process is known as evaporation.
the salt is made of heat so it evaporate faster
Yes, salt can evaporate with pool water. As pool water evaporates, the salt content remains in the pool. When the water evaporates, the salt will be left behind and may accumulate in the pool. Regular testing and monitoring of the pool water chemistry is important to maintain the proper salt levels.
The ocean doesn't evaporate because the water in the ocean is constantly being replenished through processes like precipitation and runoff from rivers. Evaporation occurs when water molecules at the surface of the ocean gain enough energy to escape into the air as water vapor, but the ocean's vast size and continuous water cycle help maintain its water levels.
Salt water evaporates from the ocean's surface, leaving behind the salt. The water vapor rises into the atmosphere and eventually condenses to form clouds. When the clouds cool and the water droplets become too heavy to stay aloft, they fall as precipitation, which is freshwater rain since the salt is left behind during the evaporation process.
no. salt is too heavy to be evaporated with the water
All the salt water fish would die and there would be no sea salt
Yes, salt can evaporate from water. When water evaporates, it leaves behind the salt, which does not evaporate.
The water evaporate, becoming water vapor, leaving the salt behind.
You cannot turn water into salt. They are entirely different molecules built from totally different atoms. You can evaporate ocean water and the salt that was dissolved in the water will remain. Every liter of water from the ocean contains about 30 grams of salt.
No, because salt usually stays in a solid form. if you tried to evaporate saltwater, dry salt would be left behind. That's what people used to do with ocean water to get table salt. Hope I helped!
Salt water will evaporate faster.
It is distillation (desalination), where evaporation is used to evaporate water from seawater to obtain salt. The water vapour may then be condensed to form potable distilled water.the process of removing salt from ocean water is called desalination
eventually the water will evaporate and leave most of the salt behind and fall again, baisically the water cycle.
Water is water. It will evaporate no matter what is it. The real question is whether or not the chemicals or salt will evaporate with the water or not. The answer to that is no. The salt/chemicals will stay in the container.
One million.
Salt water will evaporate first. Salt takes up space so to speak and there's less "water" to evaporate and so it seems to evaporate faster.