Rain would decrease if the oceans died because there wouldn't be enough water to evaporate into clouds.
Rain does not always decrease humidity. If the rain is light, it may not have a significant impact on humidity. However, heavy rain can lead to a temporary decrease in humidity as moisture is removed from the air.
Yes, it can rain at sea. Rain is a common weather phenomenon that can occur over bodies of water, including oceans.
No, most rain and snow actually comes from the evaporation of oceans. This is because about 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by oceans, making them the largest source of water vapor for the water cycle. Lakes and rivers play a smaller role in the global water cycle compared to oceans.
Rain collects in bodies of water such as rivers, lakes, and oceans, as well as in containers like buckets, ponds, and reservoirs. Additionally, rain can also be absorbed by soil and plants, contributing to groundwater.
Most rainfall on Earth ends up flowing into rivers, lakes, and oceans before evaporating back into the atmosphere to become rain again in a continuous cycle known as the water cycle.
a long time A: It would be impossible for the air to hold that much water.
Rain does not always decrease humidity. If the rain is light, it may not have a significant impact on humidity. However, heavy rain can lead to a temporary decrease in humidity as moisture is removed from the air.
There would be a decrease in biodiversity.
Rain falls alot
because there is no acid in oceans
yes
No.
atlantic
Yes.
The warming of the oceans may cause an increase in the amount of evaporation. This would lead to an increased amount of precipitation that would cause and increase of runoff due to the ground becoming saturated by the rain water.
The oceans and seas have been salty for a very long time. As soon as rain began, it would rain on land and the water would dissolve salt from the earth which would run back to the sea. Then sea water would evaporate leaving the salt, and creating more rain. This process repeated itself over eons of time, making the oceans salty. Hydrothermal vents and volcanoes below the surface of the ocean also contribute salt.
The Earth's water cycle is evaporation of water from the oceans, the clouds so formed, the rain that falls from the clouds, the runoff of the rain into watercourses that flow eventually into the oceans, and the process of evaporation begins again.