Liquid water is primarily found on the Earth's surface in oceans, lakes, rivers, and streams. It also exists in smaller bodies like ponds and wetlands, and can be found in glaciers and ice caps as it melts. Additionally, liquid water can be present in the form of rain, snowmelt, and groundwater contributing to various ecosystems.
Jarosite is the sulfate mineral found on the surface of Mars that indicates the past presence of liquid water.
It is too cold for liquid water to exist on the surface
Earth is the planet with an abundant surface of water, covering about 71% of its surface. This water is primarily found in oceans, rivers, lakes, and ice caps, making Earth unique in the solar system for its extensive bodies of liquid water. While other celestial bodies, like Europa and Enceladus, may have subsurface oceans, only Earth has large quantities of water in liquid form on its surface.
Solid Water can be found in Icebergs, because an iceberg is truly solid water because it is just frozen water. Most Icebergs can be found in Greenland and Antarctica.
Water on Mars can be found in various forms, including ice at the polar caps, subsurface ice, and occasionally as liquid brines on the surface. The Martian atmosphere is too thin for liquid water to exist for long periods.
Jarosite is the sulfate mineral found on the surface of Mars that indicates the past presence of liquid water.
Surface tension is found in liquids and it is the result of the cohesive forces between the molecules at the surface of the liquid. This creates a "skin" on the surface of the liquid that resists external forces.
The ocean
Water is the only substance found naturally in the atmosphere as a solid (ice crystals in clouds), a liquid (raindrops), and a gas (water vapor).
Most of the liquid water on Earth is in the oceans, which cover about 71% of the planet's surface. Additionally, a significant amount of liquid water is found in glaciers, ice caps, and rivers. Groundwater also comprises a large portion of Earth's liquid water reserves.
There is (and can be) no liquid surface water on the Moon. However, there could be water in the form of ice in deep craters or in the form of hydrated minerals.
Water is a common earth substance that is not found on the moon in its liquid form. While there is evidence of water in the form of ice on the moon's surface, there are no bodies of liquid water like oceans or lakes.
liquid, cause its in the ocean rivers lakes etc
The hydrosphere encompasses all liquid and frozen surface water, groundwater, and water vapor found on Earth. It includes oceans, lakes, rivers, glaciers, and underground aquifers, as well as atmospheric water in the form of clouds and water vapor.
Water is found at the poles of Mars in the form of ice. This has only been confirmed recently. As for liquid water, there is relatively no atmosphere on Mars and as such ice on the surface does not melt, but turns straight to vapor. So if there is liquid water on Mars it must be blow ground.
It is too cold for liquid water to exist on the surface
yes No it has a 100-kilometer-thick crust of ice