the water in the glass evaporates if the atmosphere temperature is at evaporating point of water
At 85 degrees it would take ...TIME to evaporate. This technecly isn't incorrect
At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.
The amount of water that would evaporate from 200ml next to a fire over 5 days depends on several factors, including the temperature of the fire, humidity, air circulation, and the surface area of the water. Typically, water can evaporate faster in a hot and dry environment. As a rough estimate, several milliliters to tens of milliliters could evaporate daily, potentially resulting in a total evaporation of around 50-200ml over the 5 days. However, this is highly variable and would require specific conditions to provide an accurate figure.
evaporation changes to water because it goes in the sky or more of the clouds then changes to water or ice as we would call snow or rain. if there is to much water in the clouds both rain and snow will come out at the same time.
As a water molecule in a glass of water, I would be constantly interacting through hydrogen bonding with the surrounding water molecules, creating a cohesive network that gives water its unique properties. We would be attracted to each other, forming a dynamic and ever-changing structure.
This depends on many factors.
It depends on how much light is shining on the glass. If there is a lot, then the water in the dark glass will evaporate faster because the temperature will be higher. If there is no light, then it does not matter.
a puddle of water will evaporate faster because it has a larger surface area that is, it has more of its moleccules in contact with the air Yes, the more air the same amount of water can cover, the faster it will evaporate. In a glass, there is much water that gets tiny amounts of air under the surface and not enough to evaporate. If the same amount of water was poured on a level flat surface (no puddle), it would evaporate very quickly.
This depends on many other factors.
Not much will happen if you put a glass bottle containing teaspoonful of water in it in the sun with its lid closed. It might evaporate.
standard glass is 8oz, but it would depend on the glass.
At 85 degrees it would take ...TIME to evaporate. This technecly isn't incorrect
At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.At higher temperatures, water will evaporate faster. So, depending on the temperature outside, it may evaporate faster, or slower, than inside.
The regular amount.
it would evaporate much much more
This depends on many factors.
This will depend on how much vinegar you are looking to have evaporate. Vinegar is a mixture of acetic acid and water. Acetic acid will evaporate faster than water at a rate of .97.