Science, asked by jontyrai3630, 8 months ago

the water on earth remain constant due to​

Answers

Answered by rahul752832
6

Answer:

here is your answer

Explanation:

The amount of water on the Earth is constant, or nearly so. Actually, the amount is increasing ever so slightly due to volcanic eruptions expelling water vapor into the atmosphere, but, for all practical purposes, the amount of water (as a gas, liquid and as snow and ice) can be considered to be constant

Answered by CherryBlooms
4

Answer:

Water evaporates from the surface of the Earth, rises into the atmosphere, cools and condenses into rain or snow, falls as precipitation, and then collects on land in the oceans, rivers, lakes, and soil, and the cycle begins again. Well, that's why the amount of water on Earth remains constant.Earth is not losing water at a meaningful rate because Earth, unlike Mars, has a cold trap in the stratosphere that freezes out most water and keeps it closer to the Earth's surface.

The amount of water on the Earth is constant, or nearly so. Actually, the amount is increasing ever so slightly due to volcanic eruptions expelling water vapor into the atmosphere, but, for all practical purposes, the amount of water (as a gas, liquid and as snow and ice) can be considered to be constant.

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