What come after evaporation?

What come before evaporation?

What come between evaporation?
Can yon write all the water cycle?

1. Condensation

2. Precipitation
3. Evaporation happens when a liquid substance becomes a gas. When water is heated, it evaporates. The molecules move and vibrate so quickly that they escape into the atmosphere as molecules of water vapor.
4. go search it up

After evaporation, the next step in the water cycle is condensation.

Before evaporation, the initial step is called precipitation, which can be in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail.

Between evaporation and condensation, there is the process of transportation, where water vapor moves through the atmosphere.

The complete water cycle, also known as the hydrological cycle, consists of the following stages:

1. Evaporation: The process of liquid water changing into water vapor due to heat energy from the sun.
2. Condensation: The water vapor in the atmosphere cools down and turns back into liquid water, forming clouds.
3. Precipitation: When the water droplets in the clouds become too heavy, they fall back to the Earth's surface as rain, snow, sleet, or hail.
4. Runoff: The water that falls on the land can either be absorbed into the ground (infiltration) or flow over the surface into rivers, lakes, and oceans.
5. Transpiration: Plants release water vapor through tiny openings in their leaves called stomata. This water vapor then enters the atmosphere.
6. Sublimation: Some ice and snow can directly change into water vapor without melting into a liquid by a process called sublimation.
7. Groundwater flow: Water that infiltrates into the ground may flow through the soil and rock layers, eventually reaching underground aquifers or contributing to the water in rivers and lakes.
8. Storage: Water can be stored in various places, such as lakes, rivers, oceans, glaciers, and underground aquifers.
9. Recharge: The process of water replenishing underground aquifers or adding to the water level of rivers and lakes.

Each stage of the water cycle interacts with and influences the others, forming a continuous and essential cycle for the distribution and conservation of Earth's water resources.