The water either seeps into the ground or it slowly evaporates into the air as water vapor. If enough water evaporates into the air, the air may become more humid. Eventually most of it rises into the sky and together with other water vapor from puddles,, rivers, lakes, ponds, oceans, becomes clouds which become rain or snow, falls to the ground, and goes back to rivers, lakes, ponds, oceans and maybe even form more puddles.
The water has two ways to go after being in a puddle. One way is that it can drain down into the ground through the dirt. Sometimes puddles are on surfaces that are unable to let water through, like asphalt, or sidewalks. That means the water has to go somewhere else. So the water in the puddle goes up into the air, by a process called evaporation. This happens because water and everything else is made up of molechules. Molechules are too small for the eye to see. The molechules of water slowly go up into the air, and over time the puddle disappears.
in the sun
Evaporation occurs as sun shines on puddles. The heat evaporates the water.
Evaporation is occurring as the sun shines on the puddles, causing the water to change from liquid to water vapor and enter the atmosphere.
They evaporate or go down the drains.
Most water is evaporated from oceans.
Evaporation.
Water puddles disappear through a process called evaporation, where the heat from the sun causes the water molecules at the surface to turn into water vapor and rise into the air. This continues until all the water has evaporated. Factors such as temperature, humidity, and wind speed can affect the rate at which water puddles disappear.
Puddles disappear in sunlight due to evaporation. The heat from the sun causes the water molecules at the surface of the puddle to gain enough energy to break free from the liquid and become water vapor. As more and more water molecules evaporate, the puddle gradually dries up and disappears.
in the sun
When a puddle is made after a while the sun will shine and the water of the puddle evaporates and becomes water vapour. It will join up with other parts of water vapour and become a cloud. When the cloud gets to heavy It will rain and make more puddles
Puddles are made of water. When the sun comes out after a rainstorm, the sun's rays of light have energy which then shines into the puddles. When liquid water receives enough energy from the sun light, it will turn into water in GAS form which then evaporates into the sky. So, puddles basically turn into gaseous water vapor because of sunlight.
Puddles disappear quicker on hot dry days because the heat causes the water in the puddle to evaporate more quickly. The high temperature speeds up the water molecules, increasing their energy and allowing them to escape into the air more rapidly. On cool dry days, the lower temperature slows down the evaporation process, leading to puddles taking longer to dry up.
a warm wind makes snow on the ground disappear but no puddles form
the water in the puddles had turned into frozen water, or ice
it condensed into a gas
Heyy, Well the water gets evaporated into the clouds and stay in the clouds until they are filled with water so thats how it starts raining. Or the water sinks into the ground (depending on the type, if it's dirt or cement)
Yes, puddles are part of the hydrosphere. The hydrosphere includes all water on Earth's surface, such as oceans, rivers, lakes, and even smaller bodies of water like puddles.