The molecule itself doesn't change, just its reaction to other water molecules. As a solid, the hydrogen bonds between the delta-negative oxygens and delta-positive hydrogens are fixed. In a liquid the hydrogen bonds are constantly forming and breaking. In steam there are very few hydrogen bonds.
If one step is out, water cycle will be imbalanced. It disturbs water cycle.
Water evaporates from bodies of water or land into the atmosphere, forms clouds through condensation, falls back to the earth's surface as precipitation (rain, snow, sleet), and then flows into rivers, lakes, and oceans through runoff.
no, when an eletric current passes through water, it causes the water to start to decompose into hydrogen and oxygen
evaporation...
No water can follow one of several paths that form the detailed cycle.
It happens by the refraction of light.
When food passes through the colon, water is absorbed to transform the food waste into feces.
water cycle. This cycle includes processes such as evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and runoff that facilitate the movement of water through different reservoirs like the atmosphere, oceans, and land.
It changes and stuff.
Water is dissociated in hydrogen and oxygen.
When fast water passes it leave
it stay at the surface
sun light bends
When light passes through water, it slows down due to the change in medium. This causes the light to refract or bend. The amount of refraction depends on the angle at which the light enters the water.
it goes back through the water cycle system over and over again
Carbon dioxide turns lime water milky.
It slows from c to c/n where n is the refractive index of water