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The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form 7 th Grade Science - Weather

The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

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The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form. 7 th Grade Science - Weather. The Water Cycle. Water is constantly cycled through ecosystems Oceans contain about 97% of the world’s water The remainder is freshwater that is in the form of gas (vapor), liquid, or ice - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

The Water Cycle and How Clouds

Form7th Grade Science - Weather

Page 2: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

The Water Cycle Water is constantly cycled through

ecosystems

Oceans contain about 97% of the world’s water

The remainder is freshwater that is in the form of gas (vapor), liquid, or ice 75% of this water is frozen in glaciers and

in ice in polar regions Only about 1% of the earth’s water is

available as fresh, liquid water

Page 3: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

The Water Cycle (continued)

Most of the fresh, liquid water is in the ground in rock and soil layers called aquifers

The rest of our freshwater is in the surface water of lakes, rivers, and ponds, and in the bodies of organisms

Page 4: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

A Simplified Model of the Water Cycle

Page 5: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Evaporation is when the sun heats up water in rivers, lakes, or in the ocean and turns it into vapor or steam. The water vapor or steam leaves the river, lake, or ocean and goes into the air.

Page 6: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Water vapor in the air gets colds and changes back into liquid, forming clouds. This is called condensation.

Page 7: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Precipitation occurs when so much condensation has occurred that the air cannot hold it anymore. The clouds get heavy and water falls back to the earth in the form of rain, hail, or snow.

Page 8: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

When water falls back to earth as precipitation, it may fall back in the ocean, lakes, and rivers or it may end up on land. When it ends up on land, it will either soak into the earth and become part of the “ground water” that plants and animals use to drink or it may run over the soil and collect in the oceans, lakes, and rivers where the cycle starts all over again.

Page 9: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

The Water Cycle Water is essential for life on earth. It is recycled

through the water or hydrologic cycle, which involves the following processes: Evaporation Condensation Sublimation Precipitation Transpiration Surface Runoff Infiltration Percolation

Page 10: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Evaporation, the changing of water from a liquid to a gas

Condensation, the changing of water from a gas to a liquid

Sublimation, the changing of waterfrom a solid to a gas

Precipitation, the process by whichwater molecules condense to formdrops heavy enough to fall to the earth'ssurface

Transpiration, the process by whichmoisture is carried through plants fromroots to leaves, where it changes tovapor and is released to the atmosphere

Surface runoff, the flowing of water over the land from higher to lower ground

Infiltration, the process of water filling the porous spaces of soil

Percolation, groundwater moving in the saturated zone below the earth's surface

Page 11: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

The Water Cycle Through these processes, the amount of water on earth

remains nearly constant and is continually recycled through time.

Water molecules may remain in one form for a very long period of time (for example, water molecules can be locked in Antarctic ice for thousands of years) and in other forms for very short times (for example, water molecules in desert rainstorms spend mere minutes as surface water before evaporating into vapor again).

Page 12: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Cloud Formation What are clouds?

Clouds are aggregates of many, many ice crystals or droplets of liquid water, suspended in the air.

Page 13: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Cloud Formation There are three necessary

ingredients for cloud formation: Water Vapor Condensation Nuclei And Cooling of Air

Page 14: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Cloud Formation Water Vapor

This is regular water in the form of an invisible, odorless gas, which is what liquid water becomes when it evaporates.

Water vapor is always in the air, just in varying amounts.

Page 15: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Cloud Formation Condensation Nuclei

These are tiny, solid particles of dust, smoke, ash, salt, pollen, etc. suspended in the air

There is usually lots of these around, even when we can’t see them.

Page 16: The Water Cycle and How Clouds Form

Cloud Formation Cooling of Air

When the air is cooled, some of the water vapor begins to condense onto some the condensation nuclei, forming lots of tiny droplets of liquid water.

If it’s cold enough in the cloud, the droplets can freeze into tiny ice crystals.