As we know, water is essential to our lives. It exists throughout the solar system and is part of the formation of the earth. The source of water is the same as the source of rocks on the earth: clouds of particles that condensate at the origin of the solar system. [1]
When the water on the surface of the earth evaporates, the cycle begins. Evaporation means the sun heats water to gas
Next, the water in the clouds is getting cold. This also makes it liquid. This process is called condensation
Water will sink into the surface and gather at the lake, the ocean, and the aquifers. It evaporates again and keeps circulating
What is water circulation? The water circulation is the name used to describe the continuous circulation of the earth's water. During the cycle plants, rivers, streams, puddles, water from the lake and the sea, and water released from the surface water evaporate to produce water vapor. This steam rises to form clouds and falls like rain, hail or snow. During the cycle water changes from liquid to gas and returns to liquid. This will happen again and again. Look closely at the circulation of water, understand the circulation of water, and see if we can identify the natural process in that circulation.
Water circulation is a continuous movement of water around the earth. The circulation of water is like a big circle, there is no real starting point. The water circulation includes four main stages: evaporation, condensation, precipitation and runoff. So how does this loop work? When the sun shines, the water of the sea and the lake evaporates with the heat of the sun. As it evaporates, it turns into steam and rises to the atmosphere. This water vapor turns into a cloud together with other water vapor. When the cloud becomes dense, it drops water to the earth with some form of rain (rain, snow, hail, sleet, etc.). As water returns to the earth, they find puddles, rivers, and rivers on the ground. This water evaporates again and the whole cycle begins again
The earth has a limited amount of water. Therefore, water always flows. This is called water circulation. Water circulation begins with evaporation. Evaporation means heating of the sun, river, lake, or sea water. Then turn it into steam or steam. Water vapor or water vapor leaves water and enters the air. Transpiration is the process by which plants lose moisture from leaves. Condensation means that water vapor in the air cools and returns to water, forming clouds. Let's think about it. When opening cold soda on a hot summer day, soda starts sweating because water droplets form outside the bottle. Precipitation occurs when a large amount of water condenses in the air and can not hold it anymore. This is how we do it with rain and snow. The collection is done during the precipitation and is collected in the sea, the lake, and the river. When falling to the ground it will sink into the basement and become groundwater.