During the water cycle, approximately 78 of the water that evaporates falls back as rain.
When rain water falls on land, it can be absorbed by the soil, flow into rivers and streams, evaporate back into the atmosphere, or be taken up by plants for growth. Some rain water may also collect in puddles or form surface runoff, which can contribute to floods or erosion of the land.
i think when rain falls into the reservoirs, it stays there until the water cycle happens again. It is the continuous movement of water. it evaporates the atmosphere the condenses which the the dust particles cling together to form a clouds and becomes heavy enough to fall back to earth as precipitation into reservoirs, oceans, rivers etc. and happens again.
Approximately 78% of the water that falls back to the Earth's surface as rain comes from the oceans, while the remaining 22% comes from land sources like rivers and lakes.
A rain gauge is a meteorological instrument used to measure the amount of precipitation that falls at a particular location over a set period of time. It typically consists of a cylindrical container with measuring markings on the side to indicate the depth of rain collected.
if it is a lot of rain, it will flood. if not, nothing will happen except for hydrating plants
it gets wet.
aer
flooding
Water in the atmosphere stays there as water vapor, or it condenses and falls as rain, snow, hail, etc.
Water in the atmosphere stays there as water vapor, or it condenses and falls as rain, snow, hail, etc.
It does not rain on the moon.
a rainbow appears
rain
A rain gauge
180inches
5ft