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Hi. The tubes that contain the water for geysers go much further down. The pressure makes the boiling point rise and not until the water gets hot enough to boil under that pressure will the water start to rise. Once the geyser erupts the pressure drops, the steam blows the water higher, and then the process starts again.

2007-03-09 08:36:23 · answer #1 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

A crucial difference between hot springs and geysers is the narrow opening to the surface. A hot spring is like an open pot of boiling water while a geyser is like a tea kettle with that tiny whistle hole. When the pressure builds up enough steam and boiling water is forced up through the small opening to great heights while the hot spring just sits there and simmers.

In 4 words... high pressure and small opening

2007-03-09 10:30:53 · answer #2 · answered by evokid 3 · 0 0

Geysers are warm springs or fountains that periodically erupt steam and boiling water into the air. those columns of water can upward push as severe as 60 meters (approximately 2 hundred ft). 3 issues are necessary for a geyser to enhance. There would desire to be warm rocks on the factor of the floor, a equipment of fractures extending downward to an underground chamber, and a very super and relentless furnish of groundwater. whilst water collects interior the underground chamber, it is going to become heated by using the nice and comfortable rocks surrounding it. because of the fact the water on the backside of the chamber is below greater suitable tension from the burden of the overlying water, it would not boil on the traditional floor temperature of a hundred stages Celsius (212 stages Fahrenheit). in spite of the reality that it would not boil, the temperature of the water keeps to upward push and this reasons it to escalate. The water is compelled up via fractures interior the rock until a number of it spills out onto floor. This reduces the strain on the water last interior the chamber and lowers its boiling factor. as quickly as this occurs, the water with out delay converts to steam and reasons the geyser to erupt.

2016-12-18 09:28:11 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Sufficient heat to create steam, even under pressure. Once the steam pressure exceeds the water pressure, the geyser erupts.

2007-03-09 08:30:47 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a geyser is just a deep crevace in a rock formation. The rock is usually superheated deep below the suface. Not hot enough to melt, but hot enough to cause the water to expand rapidly as it boils and turns to water vapor, thus sending unheated water up with it to give those ever beautiful spurts of water

2007-03-09 08:55:40 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The pressure keeps building in the chamber until it can lift the column of fluid,once it starts it will blow out the vertical column of fluid before it starts again.

2007-03-09 08:37:49 · answer #6 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

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