Describe' never ending cycle of the rain'
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The 'never-ending cycle of rain' is formed by the process of evaporation and condensation in nature. The process is as follows:
- Water from the water bodies like ponds, lakes, rivers heat up due to the heat rays of the sun and change into steam or water vapor. This process is known as evaporation.
- This steam, being lighter rises, up to higher altitudes. As the altitude increases, the temperature of the atmosphere decreases. Thus, at higher altitudes, this steam condenses into water droplets around the dust particles present in the atmosphere.
- When a lot of water vapor condenses around a particle, it falls back again on earth as rainfall.
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Answer:
Concept:
In a never-ending cycle, water travels from clouds to land and then back to the oceans. It is continuously recycled by nature. The hydrologic cycle or the water cycle are terms used to describe this.The natural processes of evaporation and condensation create the "never-ending cycle of rain."
Explanation:
- The water vapour rising from the land and bottomless sea that moves upward starts the never-ending cycle of rain.
- The water cycle or hydrologic is a continuous cycle where water evaporates, travels into the air and becomes part of a cloud, falls down to earth as precipitation, and then evaporates again. This repeats again and again in a never-ending cycle.
- Water evaporates, moves through the atmosphere and condenses into a cloud, then falls to the ground as precipitation before evaporating once more.
- Precipitation levels vary from region to place. These regions are frequently near seas or other huge bodies of water, where more water may evaporate and generate clouds. Less precipitation falls in other places.
- These regions are frequently mountainous or remote from water. Water vapour condenses to generate precipitation and freezes when clouds travel up and over mountains. The summits receive snowfaller cycle or hydrologic.
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