Water Cycle K-12 Experiments & Activities
Water Cycle
The movement of water around, over, and through the Earth is called the water cycle.
The water cycle — technically known as the hydrologic cycle — is the continuous circulation of water within the Earth's hydrosphere, and is driven by solar radiation. This includes the atmosphere, land, surface water and groundwater. As water moves through the cycle, it changes state between liquid, solid, and gas phases. Water moves from compartment to compartment, such as from river to ocean, by the physical processes of evaporation, precipitation, infiltration, runoff, and subsurface flow. Movement of water within the water cycle is the subject of the field of hydrology.
Movement of water within the water cycle
There is no definable start or finish to the water cycle. Water
molecules move continuously among different compartments, or
reservoirs, of the Earth's hydrosphere, by different physical
processes. Water evaporates from the oceans, forms clouds, which
precipitate and the water falls back to Earth. However, water does not
necessarily cycle through each compartment in order. Before reaching
the ocean, water may have evaporated, condensed, precipitated, and
become runoff multiple times.
Explanation of the Water Cycle.
The water cycle is the process that all water takes. It includes precipitation which is the falling of water in any form to earth, infiltration which is the process in which water is absorbed into the soil (it may also flow off the surface called surface run off)evaporation or transpiration which is either when water is heated and turns into water vapour or when plants use the water and give it off as water vapour, condensation which is when the water vapour cools and forms clouds. This process is then repeated over and over again.
The physical processes
The major physical processes involved in the water cycle are the
evaporation of water from the oceans and land, the transport of water
in the atmosphere, condensation, precipitation over the oceans and
land, and the flow of water from land to the oceans.
-
- Evaporation
is the transfer of water from bodies of surface water into the
atmosphere. This transfer entails a change in the physical nature of
water from liquid to gaseous phases. The source of energy is primarily solar radiation. Evaporation is closely related to transpiration from plants, as well as, to a lesser degree, perspiration from land mammals and marsupials. Thus, this transfer is sometimes referred to as evapotranspiration. 90% of atmospheric water comes from evaporation, while the remaining 10% is from transpiration.
-
- Condensation is the transformation of water vapor to liquid water droplets in the air, producing clouds and fog.
-
- Advection
is the movement of water—in solid, liquid, or vapour states—through the
atmosphere. Without advection, water that evaporated over the oceans
could not precipitate over land.
-
-
- Runoff includes the variety of ways by which water moves across the land. This includes both surface runoff and channel runoff.
As it flows, the water may infiltrate into the ground, evaporate into
the air, become stored in lakes or reservoirs, or be extracted for
agricultural or other human uses.
Less fundamental processes involved in the water cycle are:
-
- Sublimation is the state change directly from solid water (snow or ice) to water vapour.
-
- Canopy interception
is the precipitation that is intercepted by plant foliage and
eventually evaporates back to the atmosphere rather than falling to the
ground. The amount of water that it intercepted depends on the duration
of the storm, the windspeed and temperature, and the amount of foliage
present.
-
-
- Snowmelt refers to the runoff produced by melting snow.
-
- Subsurface flow is the flow of water underground, in the
vadose zone and aquifers. Subsurface water may return to the surface
(eg. as a spring or by being pumped) or eventually seep into the
oceans. Water returns to the land surface at lower elevation than where
it infiltrated, under the force of gravity
or gravity induced pressures. Groundwater tends to move slowly, and is
replenished slowly, so it can remain in aquifers for thousands of years.
Conservation of mass
Average annual water transport[1]
| Water flux |
Average rate
(10³ km³/year) |
| Precipitation over land |
107 |
| Evaporation from land |
71 |
| Runoff & groundwater from land |
36 |
| Precipitation over oceans |
398 |
| Evaporation from oceans |
434 |
The total amount, or mass, of water in the water cycle remains
essentially constant, as does the amount of water in each reservoir of
the water cycle. This means that rate of water added to one reservoir
must equal, on average over time, the rate of water leaving the same
reservoir.
The adjacent table contains the amount of water that falls as
precipitation or rises as evaporation, for both the land and oceans.
The runoff and groundwater discharge from the land to the oceans is
also included. From the law of the conservation of mass, whatever water
moves into a reservoir, on average, the same volume must leave. For
example, 107 thousand cubic km (107 × 10³ km³)
of water falls on land each year as precipitation. This is equal to the
sum of the evaporation (71 × 10³ km³/year) and runoff (36 × 10³
km³/year) of water from the land.
Water that cycles between the land and the atmosphere in a fixed area is referred to as moisture recycling.
Reservoirs
Volume of water stored in
the water cycle's reservoirs[2]
| Reservoir |
Volume of water
(106 km³) |
Percent
of total |
| Oceans |
1370 |
97.25 |
| Ice caps & glaciers |
29 |
2.05 |
| Groundwater |
9.5 |
0.68 |
| Lakes |
0.125 |
0.01 |
| Soil moisture |
0.065 |
0.005 |
| Atmosphere |
0.013 |
0.001 |
| Streams & rivers |
0.0017 |
0.0001 |
| Biosphere |
0.0006 |
0.00004 |
In the context of the water cycle, a reservoir represents the water
contained in different steps within the cycle. The largest reservoir is
the collection of oceans, accounting for 97% of the Earth's water. The
next largest quantity (2%) is stored in solid form in the ice caps and
glaciers. The water contained within all living organisms represents
the smallest reservoir.
The volume of water in the fresh water reservoirs, particularly those that are available for human use, are important water resources.
Residence times
Average reservoir residence times[3]
| Reservoir |
Average residence time |
| Oceans |
3,200 years |
| Glaciers |
20 to 100 years |
| Seasonal snow cover |
2 to 6 months |
| Soil moisture |
1 to 2 months |
| Groundwater: shallow |
100 to 200 years |
| Groundwater: deep |
10,000 years |
| Lakes |
50 to 100 years |
| Rivers |
2 to 6 months |
| Atmosphere |
9 days |
The residence time is the average time a water molecule will
spend in a reservoir. It is a measure of the average age of the water
in that reservoir, though some water will spend much less time than
average, and some much more. Groundwater can spend over 10,000 years
beneath Earth's surface before leaving. Particularly old groundwater is
called fossil water.
Water stored in the soil remains there very briefly, because it is
spread thinly across the Earth, and is readily lost by evaporation,
transpiration, stream flow, or groundwater recharge. After evaporating,
water remains in the atmosphere for about 9 days before condensing and
falling to the Earth as precipitation.
(See the adjacent table for residence times for the other reservoirs.)
Residence times can be estimated in two ways. The more common method relies on conservation of mass, and may be expressed by the following equation:

An alternative method, gaining in popularity particularly for dating
groundwater, is the use of isotopic techniques. This is done in the
subfield of isotope hydrology.
Example: Calculating the residence time of the oceans
As an example of how the residence time is calculated, consider the oceans. The volume of the oceans is roughly 1,370×106 km³. Precipitation over the oceans is about 0.398×106 km³/year and the flow of water to the oceans from rivers and groundwater is about 0.036×106 km³/year.
By dividing the total volume of the oceans by the rate of water added
(in units of volume over time) we obtain the residence time of 3,200
years—the average time it takes a water molecule that reaches an ocean
to evaporate.

Climate regulation
The water cycle is powered from solar energy. 86% of the global
evaporation occurs from the oceans, reducing their temperature by evaporative cooling. Without the cooling effect of evaporation the greenhouse effect would lead to a much higher surface temperature of 67 degrees C, and a warmer planet[4].
Most of the solar energy warms tropical seas. After evaporating,
water vapour rises into the atmosphere and is carried by winds away
from the tropics. Most of this vapour condenses as rain in the ITCZ, releasing latent heat that warms the air. This in turn drives the atmospheric circulation.
Changes in the water cycle
Over the past century the water cycle has become more intense[5], with the rates of evaporation and precipitation both increasing. This is an expected outcome of global warming, as higher temperatures increase the rate of evaporation.
Glacial retreat
is also an example of a changing water cycle, where the supply of water
to glaciers from precipitation cannot keep up with the loss of water
from melting and sublimation. Glacial retreat since 1850 has been extensive.
Human activities that alter the water cycle include:
Biogeochemical cycles
The water cycle is biogeochemical cycle. Other notable cycles are the carbon cycle and nitrogen cycle.
As water flows over and beneath the Earth it picks up and transports
soil and other sediment, mineral salt and other dissolved chemicals,
and pollutants. The oceans are saline because of the movement of
mineral salt from the land by the runoff of water, but which remains in
the oceans as water evaporates.
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Water Cycle"
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