Gravity causes it to take the path of least resistance.
Yes, during a light rain, the water table may rise slightly as the rain infiltrates into the ground. This can cause the groundwater level to increase temporarily, but it may not rise significantly unless the rain continues for an extended period.
When rain hits the ground, it can either infiltrate into the soil, flow over the ground as surface runoff, or evaporate back into the atmosphere. The fate of the rainwater depends on factors such as the soil type, slope of the ground, and the amount of rainfall.
Rain that evaporates before it hits the ground is called virga. It appears as streaks or wisps of precipitation in the sky but dissipates before reaching the surface due to evaporation.
saturatedsaturated
The term for rain that evaporates before reaching the ground is "virga." This phenomenon occurs when rain falls from clouds but evaporates due to dry air in the lower atmosphere, preventing it from reaching the surface.
No Rain water is very soft. The harness of water is a result of the mineral content and rain water has a very low mineral content as it hits the ground or water on the ground.
rain water soft whilst falling,when it hits the ground or into rivers it mixes minerals etc which in in turn turn it hard some area like devon it stay soft
The water that seeps into the ground after it precipitates is called ground water.
The water that seeps into the ground after it precipitates is called ground water.
pitter patter
water that soaks into ground after rain
Rain shadow effects ground water by when it rains so hard on one side of the mountain is messes up the ground water by tearing up the soil.
Yes, during a light rain, the water table may rise slightly as the rain infiltrates into the ground. This can cause the groundwater level to increase temporarily, but it may not rise significantly unless the rain continues for an extended period.
Infiltration
snow/rain
When rain hits the ground, it can either infiltrate into the soil, flow over the ground as surface runoff, or evaporate back into the atmosphere. The fate of the rainwater depends on factors such as the soil type, slope of the ground, and the amount of rainfall.
The water hitting the ground.