Water enters the atmosphere by getting heated up, mainly by the sun, and then evaporating into steam. Steam is then warm enough to rise to the atmosphere where it is much colder. You might notice this when flying in an airplane and that it is generally very cold in the sky. when the steam cools down enough the water turns back into a liquid and when there is enough liquid it starts to rain and the cycle begins again.
Water cycle is the way that water moves from being water vapor, to liquid water and back to water vapor.
To tell the truth the amount of water on earth never really changes. The water cycle just renews our water so it is safe for a drinking use. Other than that the only way we can gain more water on earth is from comets and their speed which melts and brings water with them as they pass through the atmosphere. But basically the water cycle does not effect the water on earth. Your welcome.
the water is the way clouds matter are being form
One way in which water changes in nature is through the process of evaporation. When the sun heats bodies of water, such as lakes and oceans, water molecules gain energy and transform from liquid to vapor, rising into the atmosphere. This vapor can then cool and condense to form clouds, eventually leading to precipitation, such as rain or snow, returning water to the Earth's surface. This cycle is a crucial part of the water cycle, maintaining the balance of ecosystems.
The sun's heat provides the evaporation (the rising of the water into the atmosphere). Once it is there it becomes clouds, which are moved by wind. The water is then moved by gravity, pulling it down to earth and along land and rivers to the lowest point, the ocean, where the whole cycle starts again. There is no other way for water to rise into the atmosphere apart from the sun's energy, so there are no other paths for water to move through the water cycle.
Yes, the phosphorus cycle does include the atmosphere but in very small amounts. Phosphorus can enter the atmosphere through volcanic eruptions, dust particles, and some industrial processes, but the atmosphere is not a major reservoir for phosphorus in the way it is for carbon, nitrogen, or water.
through evaporation that is one way
Water can enter the atmosphere through the process of evaporation, where liquid water changes into water vapor due to heat energy from the sun. Another way is through transpiration, where plants release water vapor through their leaves during photosynthesis.
Earth has a water cycle and water rains down daily in the rainforest then evaporated into the atmosphere. It continues this way from lakes, rivers, streams, and evaporates. Storms, winds, and rain cycle the water. It is continually doing this.
One way in which Earth's atmosphere interacts with the hydrosphere is through the process of evaporation. Water from oceans, lakes, and rivers evaporates into the atmosphere, where it then condenses to form clouds and eventually falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation, completing the water cycle.
The water, or hydro logic, cycle describes the pilgrimage of water as water molecules make their way from the Earth's surface to the atmosphere and back again, in some cases to below the surface. This gigantic system, powered by energy from the Sun, is a continuous exchange of moisture between the oceans, the atmosphere, and the land.
Phosphorus generally does not exist as gas
One way water can cycle through a plant is through transpiration, which is where moisture is absorbed from the soil by the plant's roots and carried to small pores on the underside of the leaves. As it collects on the underside of the leaves, it evaporates and is released into the atmosphere.
Phosphorus may enter the phosphorus cycle through weathering of rocks and minerals, which releases phosphorus into the soil and water. Additionally, human activities like agriculture and fertilizer use can contribute to phosphorus entering the cycle through runoff and leaching.
Evaporation.
there is absolutely no way to change the water cycle but there is a way to stop it get rid of all free and unshaded water the only way to stop it
Earth's water is largely recycled by way of our continual water cycle that is facilitated by way of our planets natural processes. These include sbduction and the subsequent volcanic activity ( which produces more heat and above all, green house gases to continue the slow melting of our ice caps ) These are subsequently replenished by way of our natural rates of precipitation. However, in contemporary times, this cycle of great concern. We humans release green house gases in an un-natural manner. This 'may' upset the delicate balance of the melting and thus, the water cycle. It is also postulated that some amounts of water are introduced by way of small comets and other water rich debris entering earth's atmosphere on a yearly basis. This is however, how earth probably attained large amounts of water before the planet had a functioning water cycle and atmosphere.