Temperature.
The sun is the primary energy source for the water cycle. It drives evaporation of water from oceans, lakes, and rivers, which then forms clouds and eventually falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation.
To do a project on watercycles you first need to learn about the water cycle. The water cycle is an ongoing continuing cycle. It repeats itself. First there is evaporation this is when the water from lakes or rivers eveportes into the sky. Then it becomes water vapour. The clouds in the sky are then full of water that they let it all out, in either, rain, hail or snow. To do a project on water you could make a model and label the parts of a water cycle. There are four stages to the water cycle. evaporation, transpiration, condensation and precipitation. Evaporation is when water is soaked up into the air and froms clouds. Condensation is just another word for what clouds are made of it also forms on the outside of bottles of cold liqiuds, this water is not from inside the bottle it is attracted to the coldness from in the air. Transpiration is the moisture soaked up from trees into the air. Precipitation is another word for rain and this occurs as siad above, when the clouds become too heavy to hold all the water and they give in to gravity and pour down from the sky as precipation or as you call it, 'rain'. Then this procces happens all over again, thus the water 'cycle'. what kind of project is it? a poster? a presentation? If its a poster, maybe you could draw the water cycle on the poster and have some writing that explains each part of the cycle. Have a look at http://www.kidzone.ws/water/ when all else fails, you pay more attention in class...
Water is made of 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. The total combined mass of 1 molecule of water (H2O) is 18.015 grams. This will remain constant as long as the water chemically remains as water. It won't matter what state the water is in, be it solid (ice), liquid, or vapor (steam). The mass of 1 mole of water will still be 18.015 grams.
Yes, geysers are related to the water cycle. Geysers are heated underground by magma, causing water to be heated and pressurized until it erupts as steam and water. This process demonstrates the movement of water through the Earth's layers and its return to the surface, completing a small part of the water cycle.
mitosis and meiosis
Hydrologic cycle
Yes, when water in a puddle evaporates, it transitions from a liquid to a gas and enters the atmosphere as water vapor. This process is part of the water cycle, where water evaporates from the Earth's surface and eventually condenses into clouds before falling back to the ground as precipitation.
The sun is the primary energy source for the water cycle. It drives evaporation of water from oceans, lakes, and rivers, which then forms clouds and eventually falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation.
Yeah. The serpentine belt which also controls the fan and water pump
"Presipertation" appears to be a misspelling or a typographical error. If you meant "precipitation," it refers to any form of water, liquid or solid, that falls from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface, including rain, snow, sleet, and hail. Precipitation is a key component of the water cycle and is essential for replenishing groundwater and supporting ecosystems. If you meant something else, please provide additional context.
It is added in when the washer switches to the rinse cycle and starts to fill. Pour it into the water flow and not directly on the clothes or else it could potentially stain the fabric.
You are the boss of your body, no one else controls you.
Inches in the United States Centimeters nearly anywhere else in the world
To do a project on watercycles you first need to learn about the water cycle. The water cycle is an ongoing continuing cycle. It repeats itself. First there is evaporation this is when the water from lakes or rivers eveportes into the sky. Then it becomes water vapour. The clouds in the sky are then full of water that they let it all out, in either, rain, hail or snow. To do a project on water you could make a model and label the parts of a water cycle. There are four stages to the water cycle. evaporation, transpiration, condensation and precipitation. Evaporation is when water is soaked up into the air and froms clouds. Condensation is just another word for what clouds are made of it also forms on the outside of bottles of cold liqiuds, this water is not from inside the bottle it is attracted to the coldness from in the air. Transpiration is the moisture soaked up from trees into the air. Precipitation is another word for rain and this occurs as siad above, when the clouds become too heavy to hold all the water and they give in to gravity and pour down from the sky as precipation or as you call it, 'rain'. Then this procces happens all over again, thus the water 'cycle'. what kind of project is it? a poster? a presentation? If its a poster, maybe you could draw the water cycle on the poster and have some writing that explains each part of the cycle. Have a look at http://www.kidzone.ws/water/ when all else fails, you pay more attention in class...
Water is made of 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. The total combined mass of 1 molecule of water (H2O) is 18.015 grams. This will remain constant as long as the water chemically remains as water. It won't matter what state the water is in, be it solid (ice), liquid, or vapor (steam). The mass of 1 mole of water will still be 18.015 grams.
because trees need water that only oasises can supply in the Sahara. Trees can't grow anywhere else in the Sahara because of the extreme lack of precipitation
It is through precipitation that water returns to the surface of the earth. It might be rain, hail, snow or another form.