Science, asked by nikhat51, 10 months ago

what evaporation make​

Answers

Answered by ayushadityabansal
2

Answer:

Explanation:

Evaporation happens when atoms or molecules escape from the liquid and turn into a vapor. Not all of the molecules in a liquid have the same energy. When you have a puddle of water (H2O) on a windy day, the wind can cause an increased rate of evaporation even when it is cold out.

Answered by ankit6316
0

It would be difficult to find a more important process in our weather and climate system than evaporation. Evaporation is the change of water from a liquid to a gas. Water is continuously evaporating from the surface of the Earth, literally pumping more and more water vapor into the atmosphere.

Averaged across the entire Earth, water evaporates from the surface at a rate of about 3 millimeters per day (about 1/8 of an inch). Over the tropical oceans, the value is much larger; over cold surfaces, it is much lower; and over deserts it is almost zero, since there is little or no water to evaporate.

This change of phase (from a liquid to a gas) requires heat, called "latent heat". When water evaporates, it removes heat, lowering the temperature of whatever the water was in contact with. For both water and land surface, most of this heat energy comes from the surface, not from the air.

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