Irreversible examples: Burning a piece of paper, baking a cake, digesting food, rusting of iron, breaking a glass. Reversible examples: Melting ice into water, boiling water into steam, freezing water into ice, dissolving sugar in water, compressing a gas into a liquid.
A dog running into the ocean
- light reflected from a window- light reflected from a mirror- light reflected from snow
By definition, magma is molten rock which is undergroundor sub-surface.It is called lava when above ground level.What are not examples of magma? Well, anything that isn't magma, like my wrinkly scrotum.
when we take a bath the mirror has on it some gas, the steam on the sauna, and maybe fire
Examples of surface waves include water waves on the ocean's surface, seismic surface waves that travel along the earth's surface during an earthquake, and electromagnetic waves that propagate along the boundaries between different materials.
Some examples of insects that can walk on water include water striders, pond skaters, and water measurers. These insects have special adaptations that allow them to distribute their weight and use surface tension to stay afloat on the water's surface.
Examples of moving surface water include rivers, streams, creeks, and canals. These bodies of water are typically flowing due to gravity, changes in elevation, or external forces like wind or tides.
Some examples of bugs that can walk on water are water striders, pond skaters, and Jesus bugs. These insects have special adaptations that allow them to distribute their weight and use surface tension to stay afloat on the water's surface.
examples of harmful liquids
Water in the ocean being evaporated
Aquifers, which are underground layers of rock or sediment that hold water, and springs, which are natural sources of water that flow to the surface from underground, are two examples of groundwater.
Examples of deposition water include rain, snow, sleet, and hail. These forms of precipitation carry water vapor from the atmosphere to the Earth's surface where it accumulates as liquid or solid water.
Some examples are: sea water, air, blood, soil, petrol.
earths water- saltine (oceans) 97% fresh water 3% fresh water- ice caps and glaciers 68.7% ground water 30.1% surface water .3% other .9% fresh surface water- rivers 2% swamps 11% lakes 87%
Sediment settling at the bottom of a river or lake. Snow accumulating on a mountain slope. Salt forming on the surface of drying ocean water. Wind-blown sand collecting in dunes. Chemicals precipitating out of a solution onto a surface.
Examples of surface waves include ocean waves, ripples on water, and ground waves that travel along the Earth's surface during an earthquake. These waves involve both vertical and horizontal motion at the boundary between mediums, such as air and water or air and land.