Evaporation is a type of vaporization of liquids that occur from the surface of a liquid into a gaseous phase that is not purely saturated. When water evaporates it removes the heat from the surface.
Evaporation absorb heat.
Water evaporates mostly from water bodies.
This source is ocean waters.
After water evaporates, it turns into water vapor and rises into the atmosphere. Once in the atmosphere, the water vapor cools and condenses to form clouds. Subsequently, the water falls back to the Earth's surface as precipitation.
Water is evaporated from oceans, seas, lakes, rivers.
Evaporation absorb heat.
Water evaporates mostly from water bodies.
This change of phase (from a liquid to a gas) requires heat, called the "latent heat of condensation". When water evaporates, it removes heat, lowering the temperature of the surface. For both water and land surface, most of this heat energy comes from the surface, not from the air.
This surface become colder.
Heat
Water is evaporated from any surface.
This water form clouds.
This surface become colder.
Condensation removes salt from water through a process called distillation. When water evaporates and then condenses back into liquid form, the salt is left behind in the original container, allowing for the separation of fresh water from salt water.
Water is transformed in a gas.
This source is water from oceans.
Evaporation removes water from sediment to form sedimentary rock. When water evaporates everything that was in the water dries out. The evaporation of water from sediment takes a very long time to form sedimentary rock.