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The carbon cycle

The nitrogen cycle

The Phosphorus cycle

The Sulfur cycle

The water cycle

The Calcium cycle

There could also be a Hydrogen and Oxygen cycle but these are usually included in the Carbon, Water and Nitrogen cycle.

There could also be a rare mineral cycle too but this seems to simplistic to be honoured with a name.

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16y ago

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Carbon remains constant in its cycle. It is recycled. The gist of it is that it goes from air-> to soil -> to bacteria which releases it back into the air again.


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When a substance melts, the molecules move more freely and when it freezes, they move more slowly. When a substance boils and becomes a vapor (gas), the molecules again move faster than when in the liquid state, and when the vapor condenses, the molecules move slower.


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When you heat water, its temperature increases, causing the molecules to move faster and eventually leading to phase changes, such as from liquid to gas (steam) at boiling point. If you then cool the water, it will lose energy, and the molecules will slow down, potentially condensing back into liquid if it's cooled enough. Heating the water again will again increase the temperature and energy of the molecules, repeating the cycle. This process demonstrates the principles of thermodynamics and the behavior of water in different states.


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The cage effect describes how molecules are affected by their surroundings. For example, reactants in a liquid can be trapped in a "cage" of solvent molecules. In this cage, many collisions occur before squeezing out into a new cage. If there are other reactants in this cage, a reaction is likely to occur, but if there isn't, these reactants won't react until they squeeze out again.


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Related Questions

Describe how Earth's biosphere cycles materials over and over?

The Earth's biosphere cycles materials over and over by the carbon cycle. The only new matter in the biosphere is the energy from the sun. The total amount of carbon on Earth remains the same, but it takes different forms. Every living thing contains carbon. As living things die and decompose, the carbon is recycled again and again.


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