A stable climate typically stays the same over long periods of time without significant changes in temperature, precipitation, or other weather patterns. This can occur in regions like deserts or certain tropical areas with consistent conditions.
No, they are not necessarily the same. Some deserts are quite cold - Anatarctica, Gobi, Patagonian, for example. Savannas and some grasslands are also hot and dry but are not deserts because of the precipitation they receive.
The chemical nature/identity of the substance stays the same when a physical change takes place.
The compsitions stays the same :0
When salt dissolves in water, the amount of salt stays the same. The salt molecules spread out in the water but remain present in the solution. This is a physical change and does not involve the loss or gain of salt molecules.
None, your body stays the same
it is very hot and in most areas the climate stays the same.
No, the climate stays the same but the weather changes with the seasons.
balanced forces
no because it stays in the same place and does not move away or toward the equator
It is climate
hot desert climate
An independent variable stays the same even if other variables change.
A pure substance consists of only one type of element or compound. The composition of a pure substance always stays the same, with a fixed ratio of its constituent particles.
Heating gasses or liquids has no effect on their masses.
A variable in an experiment that stays the same is a constant.
sunny and hot in summer That type of climate is called arctic. It is very cold and dark in winter. In summer the sun stays above the horizon for days or weeks, and it may be warm or cool.
sunny and hot in summer That type of climate is called arctic. It is very cold and dark in winter. In summer the sun stays above the horizon for days or weeks, and it may be warm or cool.