Yes, water can move vertically from the bottom up through a process called capillary action. This occurs when water is absorbed by materials like soil, paper, or plants due to the cohesive and adhesive properties of water molecules.
Because it does.
you put the blob off a blob off the substance you want to test on to a piece of chromotography paper about 10mm from the bottom then fill a flask about 20mm and let the bottom of the paper sit in the water if the substance is pure then there will only be one colour goes up the paper.
The density of water changes at different temperatures. As temperature goes up, density goes down.
they are bottom feeders so I would say they eat whatever ends up on the bottom of the ocean
The concentration of salt increases when water evaporates from the ocean because only water evaporates, leaving the salt behind. This process is known as "evaporative concentration" and is one of the reasons why ocean water is saline.
Aquatic life is benefited by the anomalous expansion of water because the water freezes top to bottom, not bottom to top. If it froze bottom to top, then the aquatic life would be pushed up, up, up, towards the surface of the water. Since it goes top to bottom, and the water at the bottom remains at 277K, the Aquatic life can survive there.
Water heats up quickly when heat is applied from the bottom because hot air rises and creates circulation within the water, leading to more even distribution of heat. This process, known as convection, helps the water to heat up efficiently and quickly from the bottom up.
the water goes to the bottom of the oil
its a pill that goes up your bottom
look at left side of radiator.see hose at bottom of radiator.follow it up to where it goes in behind a pulley.that is where the water pump is.
convection is when heat or energy enters water and goes through it. for example, when you are boiling water in a pot on a stove,the water at the bottom of the pot haets up first before the water on top because it's in closest contect with the heat,then that water at the bottom heats up and becomes light because hot thing are lighter then cold ones. the heated up water rises up to the top and the cold water which is heavy falls to the bottom and heats up aswell. this cerculation keeps going until the whole pot of water is heated. thereafter the pot of water boils.
Short, layman's answer- A pump at the top sucks water or one at the bottom pumps water up. This water goes into a rubber bladder in a pressure tank pre-charged with air that cannot escape. This air gives the household pressure as it forces the water out of faucets as they are opened.Short, layman's answer- A pump at the top sucks water or one at the bottom pumps water up. This water goes into a rubber bladder in a pressure tank pre-charged with air that cannot escape. This air gives the household pressure as it forces the water out of faucets as they are opened.
lower radiator hose
it goes up into the clouds
First of all, there are two principles:1.hot water is less dense and rises up2.cold water is more dense and goes down.so when water becomes hot, it rises up and replaces the cold water which comes down. That is why cold water enters from the bottom.
below the water pump in the bottom coolant line that goes to your water pump
No it doesn't. Syrup is more denser then water which scientifically means that it goes into the bottom.