The water in the hydrosphere generally remains relatively constant due to the water cycle, where water evaporates from the surface, condenses into clouds, and falls back to the Earth as precipitation. This cycle helps maintain a balance by continually moving water between the atmosphere, oceans, and land.
Your mass will stay the same no matter where you go.
Yes, the amount of water on Earth remains relatively constant. The water cycle continually circulates water between the atmosphere, oceans, rivers, and other bodies of water, maintaining a balance. However, changes in climate and human activities can impact the distribution and availability of water in different regions.
Areas near large bodies of water stay warmer in the winter than inland areas because the seas hold a lot of heat, much more than air. They stay about the same temperature year round. Air holds very little heat and gives up or takes on heat easily. When breezes blow in from the water the air has taken heat from the water, making it near the temperature of the water. The opposite happens in the summer. The water is about the same temperature as it was in the winter so the breezes that blow from it onto land are cooler.
The amount of carbon in the atmosphere should stay the same to maintain a balance in the Earth's climate and prevent negative impacts such as global warming and climate change.
Generally, clay particles are smaller and lighter than silt particles, so they tend to stay suspended in water longer. Silt particles are larger and heavier, causing them to settle faster in comparison to clay particles.
The water from the hydrosphere is permanently evaporated.
The law of mass conservation is generally valid.
No. It gets hotter - that is not the same
Generally, platypuses stay in the same territory. However, drought and low water levels will force them to try and find a new creek or river.
After water has been boiled, its mass will stay the same.
It stays the same.
no
It stay the same
no they do not all stay in the same place because some birds live in water
It's a Group of orcas which generally stay in the same area.
It depends were you are, generally it would stay colder if you left it in the water
No they dont