get it from a well or tap or river with clean water................. anyway use your COMMON SENSE in other words ues your BRAIN if you have one!!
The weight of water is approximately 1 kg per liter. So a 15 liter water gain would equal 15 kg weight gain.
Oceans can both gain and lose water. They gain water from sources like rainfall, rivers, and melting ice caps. They lose water through processes like evaporation and when water is locked into glacial ice. Overall, the balance between these inputs and outputs determines whether the oceans are gaining or losing water.
Heat
yes they do
Well, one gallon of water equals 8.34 pounds, so yes, if you drank one gallon of water you would immediately gain 8.34 pounds of weight. Most of those 8.34 pounds would end up as urine though, assuming you are not seriously dehydrated. So the weight gain would only be temporary.
Salt controls water absorption so the cells would gain water.
Freshwater fish tend to gain water.
Gain laundry detergent is approximately 60-70% water.
The weight of water is approximately 1 kg per liter. So a 15 liter water gain would equal 15 kg weight gain.
condensation
Carbonated water contains no calories, so it shouldn't cause weight gain.
You lose water through urine, feces and perspiration (sweating). You gain water by eating, drinking and metabolic generation.
It is not correct, filling the stomach with water is not a true weight gain.
You will typically retain water after a flight, so any weight that you gain is water weight that will be naturally got rid of.
Oceans can both gain and lose water. They gain water from sources like rainfall, rivers, and melting ice caps. They lose water through processes like evaporation and when water is locked into glacial ice. Overall, the balance between these inputs and outputs determines whether the oceans are gaining or losing water.
For what?It requires a heat gain for the water,but a heat loss for whatever the water is in contact with.
Consume lots of water durhead!