the water cycle
Yes, scientists can track the movement of water on Earth through the water cycle, which includes processes like evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. By studying these processes, scientists can determine if water ever leaves the Earth's system.
The amount of water on the Earth doesn't change very much at all. Trace quantities are dissociated into hydrogen and oxygen by sunlight, or launched into space on our various space craft. Water hardly ever arrives on the Earth from space, but a medium sized comet could deliver billions of gallons of water (and knock our civilization into a new Dark Age) if it collided with the Earth. Many scientists believe that cometary impacts may have provided the majority of Earth's water when our planet was still young.
there are only three, and they are the most common for any substance rarely ever will you see plasma, anyways they are solid (ice) liquid (water) and gas (water vapor)
it is 75percent
No, the Earth's rotation will not cease. The Earth will continue to rotate on its axis as long as it exists.
As far as we know, no rogue planet has ever come near Earth. Comets and asteroids have come near Earth, but not actual planets.
Probably several times. It is assumed that a third of Earth water came from comets and it was a comet that hit the Earth 65 million years ago and caused the dinosaur extinction.
Yes, scientists can track the movement of water on Earth through the water cycle, which includes processes like evaporation, condensation, and precipitation. By studying these processes, scientists can determine if water ever leaves the Earth's system.
It tears earth from the ground and carries it which ever way water flows
Water on earth is never lost in space; vapors are condensed and transformed in rains and snow.
The amount of water on the Earth doesn't change very much at all. Trace quantities are dissociated into hydrogen and oxygen by sunlight, or launched into space on our various space craft. Water hardly ever arrives on the Earth from space, but a medium sized comet could deliver billions of gallons of water (and knock our civilization into a new Dark Age) if it collided with the Earth. Many scientists believe that cometary impacts may have provided the majority of Earth's water when our planet was still young.
yes...the water is in constant cycle, and there is as much water as there ever has been (except for the first ages of the earth, before the water came to be here) and as there ever will be (until the earth is vapourised). Will there be enough to satisfy the increasing population is another question entirely.
No person has ever been to Mars. No spacecraft has ever surveyed Mars and returned to earth. No spacecraft has ever landed on Mars and lifted off again. No liquid water has ever been observed on Mars, and no samples have ever been removed from its surface. In conclusion, we frankly don't know what the question is talking about.
UFOs are very often seen on Earth, and nobody knows what is inside of one. If there are truly UFOs from space, when they supposedly come to Earth they may already be learning from us.
they came to earth ever since god created land animals on day 6
no there was not. At the moment approximately 97% of water on Earth is salty, leaving only 3% fresh
No water is ever lost. It simply moves from one place to another.