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28 answers

Hi JodieDunn,
The answer is actually no. While the majority of free water does get recycled, evaporating and then raining back down to form rivers and flowing to the ocean to evaporate again - some part of it is also converted into other compounds, like minerals. Arguably that water which is not free-flowing is "lost" from the hydrological cycle but it's really still here. However, over long periods of time, there is also some small amount of water vapour which is lost to space. The reason that many folks think it is the same amount is because the earth is so large and so much of the earth's surface is covered by water that amount which is lost to space is negligible, but the truth is that some small amount IS being lost because disassociated atoms of water in the form of hydrogen and oxygen drift off at the edge of our atmosphere into space while the earth orbits the sun. The main cause is the solar wind and other high energy particles carrying away those atoms from the upper atmosphere.

2006-08-19 03:07:30 · answer #1 · answered by Michael Darnell 7 · 0 0

Dear Jodie,
De ansr is actualy no.Though the most of it does get recycled, evaporating and then raining back down to form rivers and flowing to the ocean to evaporate again - some part of it is also converted into other compounds, like minerals. Arguably that water which aint free-flowing s "lost" from the hydrological cycle but it's realy still here. Hwevr, over long periods of time, there is also some small amount of water vapour which is lost to space. The reason that many folks think it is the same amount is because the earth is so large and so much of the earth's surface is covered by water that amount which is lost to space is negligible, but the truth is that some small amount IS STILL being lost because disassociated atoms of water in the form of hydrogen and oxygen drift off at the edge of our atmosphere into space while the earth orbits the sun. The main cause is the solar wind and other high energy particles carrying away those atoms from the upper atmosphere.....








So i guess YOUR question was answered !!!!!!

2006-08-19 05:56:19 · answer #2 · answered by Krp_jk 1 · 0 0

Yes, That is True.
Every drop of water that we now have was here from the start.
No More .... No Less.

I studied this at the University and it is strange but ture.
The water has to come from some source and that is evaporation.
It evaporates and then condenses and then we got rain.

Do not get into a discussion about Noa's Arc cause it can drive you Nuts. That flood was only in one part of the world. Just like New Olreans.

2006-08-19 02:34:34 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No no, you are looking at this wrong. The MATTER is still there, but the atoms and subatomic particles that form the hydrogen and oxygen are in no way obligated to retain the bonds they formed to make water one billion years ago to this day. Also, I am fairly sure that with modern technology some of the hydrogen that was formerly part of a water molecule might have been converted to energy through nuclear experimentation, therefore that amount of former water no longer exists as matter, but has been dissipated into the cosmos!

2006-08-19 02:31:12 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not at all, hydrogen is sometimes separated from the water molecule and the oxygen can be taken up into CO2 or Ozone or any of a thousand reactions, the Hydrogen can react with Carbon and become an organic molecule, or atoms can be knocked out into space. Water is coming and going all the time.

2006-08-19 04:10:33 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

most likely yes even though humans drink it they urinate it out again if it is in a pond lake river or ocean it evaporates and just comes back down in the form of rain snow hail or sleet water can be made into ice so some of the water is frozen like the north poles water even if water soaks into the ground it is still on the planet so it is true it just evaporates or soaks into the ground but when water gets taken up to space so yes and no is the anwser

2006-08-19 05:51:54 · answer #6 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Actually Energy changes its form and nither being created or destroyed but so, you cann't say that the single drop of water on earth is here because it may have change in other form so the parts of water formation 1) Hydrozen and 2) oxygen is on earth as much as they in the quantity on earth

2006-08-19 02:34:19 · answer #7 · answered by gym1_ahd 2 · 0 0

No. The earth loses small amounts of vapor into the atmosphere. When the water is broken down into oxygen and hydrogen, it does not always bond back together to produce H2O, or water.

2006-08-19 18:44:31 · answer #8 · answered by Another Guy 4 · 0 0

i love questions like those that make me imagine! i'm a Christian and through extension a creationist. i very infrequently worry myself with this actual question yet i am going to offer it a shot. For starters, i don't believe of that i in my view have ever used the argument that each little thing it really is complicated or has been created has to have a author. For me, and this can not be steeped in clinical good judgment, or pragmatism, when I watch the solar upward push & set, i note the animals that inhabit the earth and how they function and artwork mutually with one yet another, and the wonders of human body, i purely can not trust that any of it really is random. this is objective, not complexity that leads me to trust that this universe has a ultimate author, who in accordance to the Christian faith has no author. human beings have situation fathoming this because all all of us understand and understand has a beginning, middle and an end. yet per chance, the existence of gods is and could be, previous our understanding. Now for those persons who can not get previous the petty information of introduction, i concern that they'd be lacking out on something so a lot extra significant- a existence complete of peace and amusement that i trust can in ordinary words extremely be obtained through faith. the point is that we were created and we could spend the time we've loving, giving, and being grateful we can relish the universe. i convey regret if I have not responded all of your questions, yet for now this is all i am going to say on the remember.

2016-11-30 19:47:24 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The answer is no, as you know that water can be solid as in ice and liquid as in water and gas as in steam. think of the earth, its gravity hold the atmosphere togther from fading away into the space. it's true that the numebr of atoms on earth is maintained constant (before man is able to send things away from the earth into space and ignoring meteorite, but water molecules can be irreversiblly converted into something else for example the chemical reaction CH3COCL (acyle chloride) + H2O (water) = CH3COOH (ethanoic acid) + HCL (hydrochloric acid), in this case water molecule on earth is reduced, however there are reactions which produced more water molecules from example CH3COOH ( ethanoic acid) + NH3 (ammonia) = CH3CONH2 (ethylamide) + H2O (water), there are many more examples, so to your answer, every drop of water (which it contains billions and billions of water molecules) is being converted and produced by many natural and synthetic chemical reaction, so i would say the total amount of water on earth varies from time to time, but everytaully the earth will be destroyed when the sun runs out of hydrogen fuel, so water on earth will not always be on earth.

2006-08-19 02:29:31 · answer #10 · answered by lippy19850528 3 · 0 1

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