Chemistry, asked by diego4622, 11 months ago

precipitation on the landmass is larger than the evaporation from it

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Answered by chandanmahato24
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Evaporation is the process by which water changes from a liquid to a gas or vapor. Evaporation is the primary pathway that water moves from the liquid state back into the water cycle as atmospheric water vapor. Studies have shown that the oceans, seas, lakes, and rivers provide nearly 90 percent of the moisture in the atmosphere via evaporation, with the remaining 10 percent being contributed by plant transpiration.

A very small amount of water vapor enters the atmosphere through sublimation, the process by which water changes from a solid (ice or snow) to a gas, bypassing the liquid phase. This often happens in the Rocky Mountains as dry and warm Chinook winds blow in from the Pacific in late winter and early spring. When a Chinook takes effect local temperatures rise dramatically in a matter of hours. When the dry air hits the snow, it changes the snow directly into water vapor, bypassing the liquid phase. Sublimation is a common way for snow to disappear quickly in arid climates. (Source: Mount Washington Observatory)

Why evaporation occurs

Heat (energy) is necessary for evaporation to occur. Energy is used to break the bonds that hold water molecules together, which is why water easily evaporates at the boiling point (212° F, 100° C) but evaporates much more slowly at the freezing point. Net evaporation occurs when the rate of evaporation exceeds the rate of condensation. A state of saturation exists when these two process rates are equal, at which point the relative humidity of the air is 100 percent. Condensation, the opposite of evaporation, occurs when saturated air is cooled below the dew point (the temperature to which air must be cooled at a constant pressure for it to become fully saturated with water), such as on the outside of a glass of ice water. In fact, the process of evaporation removes heat from the environment, which is why water evaporating from your skin cools you.

Evaporation drives the water cycle

Credit: Tim Whittemore" style="border: none;">

A valley in New Zealand in early morning with fog layer in the valley bottom. Heat from the sun or a dry wind will dissipate the fog soon.
Credit: Tim Whittemore View full size

Evaporation from the oceans is the primary mechanism supporting the surface-to-atmosphere portion of the water cycle. After all, the large surface area of the oceans (over 70 percent of the Earth's surface is covered by the oceans) provides the opportunity for large-scale evaporation to occur. On a global scale, the amount of water evaporating is about the same as the amount of water delivered to the Earth as precipitation. This does vary geographically, though. Evaporation is more prevalent over the oceans than precipitation, while over the land, precipitation routinely exceeds evaporation. Most of the water that evaporates from the oceans falls back into the oceans as precipitation. Only about 10 percent of the water evaporated from the oceans is transported over land and falls as precipitation. Once evaporated, a water molecule spends about 10 days in the air. The process of evaporation is so great that without precipitation runoff, and groundwater discharge from aquifers, oceans would become nearly empty.

People make use of evaporation

Seawater evaporation ponds on the Isle of Rhé off the coast of France are used to obtain salt.
Credit: Wikipedia

If you ever find yourself stranded on an island in need of some salt, just grab a bowl, add some seawater, and wait for the sun to evaporate the water. In fact,one way to produce table salt is to evaporate saline water in evaporation ponds, a technique used by people for thousands of years.

Seawater contains other valuable minerals that are easily obtained by evaporation. The Dead Sea is located in the Middle East within a closed watershed and without any means of outflow, which is abnormal for most lakes. The primary mechanism for water to leave the lake is by evaporation, which can be quite high in a desert—upwards of 1,300 - 1,600 millimeters per year. The result is that the waters of the Dead Sea have the highest salinity and density (which is why you  float "higher"; when you lay in the water) of any sea in the world, too high to support life. The water is ideal for locating evaporation ponds for the extraction of not only table salt, but also magnesium, potash, and bromine. (Source: Overview of Middle East Water Resources, Middle East Water Data Banks Project ).

Evaporative cooling: Cheap air conditioning!

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