Water is the only thing.
because the sun heats the water up and it turns to water vapor and it will gather, condense, and make a cloud, and eventuallt come back down again as precipitation
The energy in the water cycle primarily comes from the sun. Solar radiation heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate from oceans, lakes, and rivers. This evaporation process provides the energy needed for the water cycle to occur.
It receive thermal from the sun how the sun heats it up because the sun shine over the ocean
The sun and the earth. The earth has fire/heat/magma inside it that heats up the earth and lakes and oceans
Energy from the sun heats up the Earth's surface, oceans, and atmosphere. This heat drives weather patterns, ocean currents, and the water cycle on our planet.
The main source of heat is from the sun.
In most cases, I figure it'd be the sun.
The energy for the water cycle originally comes from the sun. Solar radiation heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate from oceans, lakes, and rivers. This process drives the water cycle by providing the energy needed for evaporation, condensation, and precipitation to occur.
Yes, the sun is a driving force behind the water cycle. Solar energy heats the Earth’s surface, causing water to evaporate from oceans, lakes, and rivers. This evaporation forms clouds and leads to precipitation, completing the water cycle.
Sun energy is used to evaporate water. This is the initial step of water cycle.
The primary energy source that drives Earth's water cycle is the sun. Solar radiation heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate from oceans, lakes, and rivers. This water vapor then condenses into clouds, falls as precipitation, and eventually returns to the Earth's surface as runoff or groundwater.
The sun heats the Earth's surface, causing water to evaporate from oceans and other bodies of water. This water vapor rises into the atmosphere, cools, condenses into clouds, and eventually falls back to the ground as precipitation in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.