Water's Journey: States, Cycle, and Conservation

Estratto della scheda di revisione

Course Outline

  1. States of Water
  2. Water Cycle Processes
  3. Water Properties
  4. Water Conservation
  5. Water Pollution

1. States of Water

Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Solid: The state of water where molecules are tightly packed in a fixed structure, forming ice.
  • Liquid: The state of water where molecules are loosely packed and can flow, forming water we drink and use daily.
  • Gas (Vapor): The state of water where molecules are spread out and move freely, as in steam or water vapor.
  • Melting Point: The temperature at which solid water (ice) turns into liquid water, typically 0°C.
  • Freezing Point: The temperature at which liquid water turns into solid ice, also 0°C.
  • Evaporation: The process where liquid water changes into water vapor at temperatures below boiling point, usually at the surface.

Essential Points

  • Water exists naturally in three states: solid, liquid, and gas.
  • Changes between states occur through heating or cooling: melting (solid to liquid), freezing (liquid to solid), evaporation (liquid to gas), and condensation (gas to liquid).
  • The boiling point of water is 100°C at standard atmospheric pressure, where water turns into vapor throughout the liquid.
  • The water cycle involves continuous changes between these states, driven by energy from the sun.
  • Understanding the states of water helps explain weather patterns, the water cycle, and environmental processes.
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Anteprima del quiz

1. What is the solid state of water?

2. What is the primary energy source that drives evaporation in the water cycle?

3. What is the primary role of water's unique properties such as polarity, cohesion, and high specific heat?

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Anteprima delle flashcard

States of Water — types?

Solid, liquid, and gas.

Water cycle — process?

Continuous movement of water through evaporation, condensation, precipitation, and collection.

Water's polarity — role?

Enables hydrogen bonding and solvent properties.

Conservation — goal?

Reduce water waste and prevent scarcity.

Pollutants — examples?

Chemicals, waste, microorganisms.

Point source pollution — origin?

Single, identifiable source.

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