Dictionary Definition
watering
Noun
2 wetting with water; "the lawn needs a great
deal of watering"
User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
watering- present participle of water
Extensive Definition
Water is a common chemical
substance that is essential for the survival of all known forms
of life. In typical usage,
water refers only to its liquid form or state,
but the substance also has a solid state, ice, and a gaseous state, water vapor.
About 1.460 petatonnes (Pt)
of water covers 71% of the Earth's surface,
mostly in oceans and other large water bodies, with 1.6% of water
below ground in aquifers
and 0.001% in the air
as vapor, clouds (formed of solid and liquid
water particles suspended in air), and precipitation.
Some of the Earth's water is contained within man-made and natural
objects near the Earth's surface such as water towers,
animal and plant bodies, manufactured products, and food
stores.
Saltwater oceans hold 97% of surface water,
glaciers and polar
ice caps
2.4%, and other land surface water such as rivers, lakes and ponds 0.6%. Water moves continually
through a cycle of
evaporation or
transpiration
(evapotranspiration),
precipitation, and
runoff,
usually reaching the sea.
Winds carry water vapor over land at the same rate as runoff into
the sea, about 36 Tt per year. Over land, evaporation and
transpiration contribute another 71 Tt per year to the
precipitation of 107 Tt per year over land. Some water is
trapped for varying periods in ice caps, glaciers, aquifers, or in
lakes, sometimes providing fresh water for life on land. Clean,
fresh water is essential to human and other life. However, in
many parts of the world - especially developing
countries - it is in short supply. Water is a solvent for a wide variety of
chemical substances.
Types of water
Water can appear in three phases.
Water takes many different forms on Earth: water vapor
and clouds in the sky;
seawater and rarely
icebergs in the ocean;
glaciers and rivers in the mountains; and aquifers in the
ground.
Water can dissolve many different substances,
giving it different tastes and odors. In fact, humans and other
animals have developed senses to be able to evaluate the potability
of water: animals generally dislike the taste of salty sea water and
the putrid swamps and
favor the purer water of a mountain spring or aquifer. Humans also
tend to prefer cold water rather than lukewarm, as cold water is
likely to contain fewer microbes. The taste
advertised in spring water
or mineral
water derives from the minerals dissolved in it, as pure H2O is
tasteless. As such, purity in spring and mineral
water refers to purity from toxins, pollutants, and microbes.
Because of the importance of precipitation to
agriculture, and to
mankind in general,
different names are given to its various forms:
- according to phase
- solid - ice
- liquid - water
- gaseous - water vapor
- according to meteorology:
- according to occurrence
- groundwater
- meltwater
- meteoric water
- connate water
- fresh water
- mineral water – contains much minerals
- brackish water
- dead water – strange phenomenon which can occur when a layer of fresh or brackish water rests on top of more dense salt water, without the two layers mixing. It is dangerous for ship traveling.
- seawater
- brine
- according to uses
- tap water
- bottled water
- drinking water or potable water – useful for everyday drinking, without fouling, it contains balanced minerals that are not harmful to health (see below)
- purified water, laboratory-grade, analytical-grade or reagent-grade water – water which has been highly purified for specific uses in science or engineering. Often broadly classified as Type I, Type II, or Type III, this category of water includes, but is not limited to the following:
- according to other features
- soft water – contains less minerals
- hard water – from underground, contains more minerals
- distilled water, double distilled water, deionized water - contains no minerals
- heavy water – made from heavy atoms of hydrogen - deuterium. It is in nature in normal water in very low concentration. It was used in construction of first nuclear reactors.
- tritiated water
- according to microbiology
- according to religion
Chemical and physical properties
Water is the chemical substance with chemical formula H2O: one molecule of water has two hydrogen atoms covalently bonded to a single oxygen atom.The major chemical and physical properties of
water are:
- Water is a tasteless, odorless liquid at ambient temperature and pressure. The color of water and ice are, intrinsically, a very light blue hue, although water appears colorless in small quantities. Ice also appears colorless, and water vapor is essentially invisible as a gas.
- Water is transparent, and thus aquatic plants can live within the water because sunlight can reach them. Only strong UV light is slightly absorbed.
- Water is a liquid under standard conditions.
- Since oxygen has a higher electronegativity than hydrogen, water is a polar molecule. The oxygen has a slight negative charge while the hydrogens have a slight positive charge giving the article a strong effective dipole moment. The interactions between the different dipoles of each molecule cause a net attraction force associated with water's high amount of surface tension.
- Another very important force that causes the water molecules to stick to one another is the hydrogen bond.
- The boiling point of water (and all other liquids) is directly related to the barometric pressure. For example, on the top of Mt. Everest water boils at about , compared to at sea level. Conversely, water deep in the ocean near geothermal vents can reach temperatures of hundreds of degrees and remain liquid.
- Water sticks to itself. Water has a high surface tension caused by the strong cohesion between water molecules because it is polar. The apparent elasticity caused by surface tension drives the capillary waves.
- Water also has high adhesion properties because of its polar nature.
- Capillary action refers to the tendency of water to move up a narrow tube against the force of gravity. This property is relied upon by all vascular plants, such as trees.
- Water is a very strong solvent, referred to as the universal solvent, dissolving many types of substances. Substances that will mix well and dissolve in water, e.g. salts, sugars, acids, alkalis, and some gases: especially oxygen, carbon dioxide (carbonation), are known as "hydrophilic" (water-loving) substances, while those that do not mix well with water (e.g. fats and oils), are known as "hydrophobic" (water-fearing) substances.
- All the major components in cells (proteins, DNA and polysaccharides) are also dissolved in water.
- Pure water has a low electrical conductivity, but this increases significantly upon solvation of a small amount of ionic material such as sodium chloride.
- Water has the second highest specific heat capacity of any known chemical compound, after ammonia, as well as a high heat of vaporization (40.65 kJ mol−1), both of which are a result of the extensive hydrogen bonding between its molecules. These two unusual properties allow water to moderate Earth's climate by buffering large fluctuations in temperature.
- The maximum density of water is at . Water becomes even less dense upon freezing, expanding 9%. This causes an unusual phenomenon: ice floats upon water, and so water organisms can live inside a partly frozen pond because the water on the bottom has a temperature of around .
- Water forms an azeotrope with many other solvents.
Distribution of water in nature
Water in the Universe
Much of the universe's water may be produced as a byproduct of star formation. When stars are born, their birth is accompanied by a strong outward wind of gas and dust. When this outflow of material eventually impacts the surrounding gas, the shock waves that are created compress and heat the gas. The water observed is quickly produced in this warm dense gas.Water has been detected in interstellar
clouds within our galaxy, the Milky Way. It
is believed that water exists in abundance in other galaxies too,
because its components, hydrogen and oxygen, are among the most
abundant elements in the universe. Interstellar clouds eventually
condense into solar
nebulae and solar
systems, such as ours.
Water vapor is on:
- Mercury - 3.4% in the atmosphere
- Venus - 0.002% in the atmosphere
- Earth - trace in the atmosphere (varies with climate)
- Mars - 0.03% in the atmosphere
- Jupiter - 0.0004% in the atmosphere
- Saturn - in ices only
- Enceladus (moon of Saturn) - 91% in the atmosphere
- exoplanets known as HD 189733 b and HD 209458 b.
Liquid water is on:
- Earth - 71% of surface
Strong evidence suggests that liquid water is
present just under the surface of Saturn's moon Enceladus.
Probably some liquid water is on Europa.
Probability or possibility of distribution of
water ice is at: lunar ice on
the Moon, Ceres
(dwarf planet), Tethys
(moon). Ice is probably in internal structure of Uranus, Neptune, and
Pluto and on
comets.
Water and habitable zone
The existence of liquid water, and to a lesser extent its gaseous and solid forms, on Earth is vital to the existence of life on Earth as we know it. The Earth is located in the habitable zone of the solar system; if it were slightly closer to or further from the Sun (about 5%, or 8 million kilometres or so), the conditions which allow the three forms to be present simultaneously would be far less likely to exist.Earth's mass allows gravity to hold an atmosphere.
Water vapor and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere provide a greenhouse
effect which helps maintain a relatively steady surface
temperature. If Earth were smaller, a thinner atmosphere would
cause temperature extremes preventing the accumulation of water
except in polar ice
caps (as on Mars).
It has been proposed that life itself may
maintain the conditions that have allowed its continued existence.
The surface temperature of Earth has been relatively constant
through geologic
time despite varying levels of incoming solar radiation
(insolation),
indicating that a dynamic process governs Earth's temperature via a
combination of greenhouse gases and surface or atmospheric albedo. This proposal is known as
the Gaia
hypothesis.
The state of water also depends on a planet's
gravity. If a planet is sufficiently massive, the water on it may
be solid even at high temperatures, because of the high pressure
caused by gravity.
There are various theories about
origin of water on Earth.
Water on Earth
Hydrology is the study of the movement, distribution, and quality of water throughout the Earth. The study of the distribution of water is hydrography. The study of the distribution and movement of groundwater is hydrogeology, of glaciers is glaciology, of inland waters is limnology and distribution of oceans is oceanography. Ecological processes with hydrology are in focus of ecohydrology.The collective mass of water found on, under, and
over the surface of a planet is called hydrosphere. Earth's
approximate water volume (the total water supply of the world) is
1 360 000 000 km³
(326 000 000 mi³). Of this volume:
- 1 320 000 000 km³ (316 900 000 mi³ or 97.2%) is in the oceans.
- 25 000 000 km³ (6 000 000 mi³ or 1.8%) is in glaciers, ice caps and ice sheets.
- 13 000 000 km³ (3,000,000 mi³ or 0.9%) is groundwater.
- 250 000 km³ (60,000 mi³ or 0.02%) is fresh water in lakes, inland seas, and rivers.
- 13 000 km³ (3,100 mi³ or 0.001%) is atmospheric water vapor at any given time.
Groundwater and fresh water are useful or
potentially useful to humans as water
resources.
Liquid water is found in bodies of water, such as
an ocean, sea, lake, river, stream, canal, pond, or puddle. The majority of water on
Earth is sea water.
Water is also present in the atmosphere in solid, liquid, and vapor
phases. It also exists as groundwater in aquifers.
The most important geological processes caused by
water are:
chemical weathering, water
erosion, water sediment transport and
sedimentation, mudflows,
ice
erosion and sedimentation by glacier.
Water cycle
The water cycle (known scientifically as the hydrologic cycle) refers to the continuous exchange of water within the hydrosphere, between the atmosphere, soil water, surface water, groundwater, and plants.Water moves perpetually through each of these
regions in the water cycle
consisting of following transfer processes:
- evaporation from oceans and other water bodies into the air and transpiration from land plants and animals into air.
- precipitation, from water vapor condensing from the air and falling to earth or ocean.
- runoff from the land usually reaching the sea.
Water runoff often collects over watersheds
flowing into rivers. A mathematical model used to simulate river or
stream flow and calculate water quality parameters is
hydrological transport model. Some of water is diverted to
irrigation for
agriculture. Rivers and seas offer opportunity for travel and commerce. Through erosion, runoff shapes the
environment creating river valleys and deltas which
provide rich soil and level ground for the establishment of
population centers. A flood occurs when an area of land,
usually low-lying, is covered with water. It is when a river
overflows its banks or flood from the sea. A drought is an extended period of
months or years when a region notes a deficiency in its water
supply. This occurs when a region receives consistently below
average precipitation.
Fresh water storage
Some runoff water is trapped for periods, for example in lakes. At high altitude, during winter, and in the far north and south, snow collects in ice caps, snow pack and glaciers. Water also infiltrates the ground and goes into aquifers. This groundwater later flows back to the surface in springs, or more spectacularly in hot springs and geysers. Groundwater is also extracted artificially in wells. This water storage is important, since clean, fresh water is essential to human and other land-based life. In many parts of the world, it is in short supply.Tides
Tides are the cyclic rising and falling of Earth's ocean surface caused by the tidal forces of the Moon and the Sun acting on the oceans. Tides cause changes in the depth of the marine and estuarine water bodies and produce oscillating currents known as tidal streams. The changing tide produced at a given location is the result of the changing positions of the Moon and Sun relative to the Earth coupled with the effects of Earth rotation and the local bathymetry. The strip of seashore that is submerged at high tide and exposed at low tide, the intertidal zone, is an important ecological product of ocean tides.Effects on life
From a biological standpoint, water has
many distinct properties that are critical for the proliferation of
life that set it apart from
other substances. It carries out this role by allowing organic
compounds to react in ways that ultimately allow replication. All known forms
of life depend on water. Water is vital both as a solvent in which many of the
body's solutes dissolve and as an essential part of many metabolic processes within
the body. Metabolism is the sum total of anabolism and catabolism.
In anabolism, water is removed from molecules (through energy
requiring enzymatic chemical reactions) in order to grow larger
molecules (e.g. starches, triglycerides and proteins for storage of
fuels and information). In catabolism, water is used to break bonds
in order to generate smaller molecules (e.g. glucose, fatty acids
and amino acids to be used for fuels for energy use or other
purposes). Water is thus essential and central to these metabolic
processes. Therefore, without water, these metabolic processes
would cease to exist, leaving us to muse about what processes would
be in its place, such as gas absorption, dust collection,
etc.
Water is also central to photosynthesis and
respiration. Photosynthetic cells use the sun's energy to split off
water's hydrogen from oxygen. Hydrogen is combined with CO2
(absorbed from air or water) to form glucose and release oxygen.
All living cells use such fuels and oxidize the hydrogen and carbon
to capture the sun's energy and reform water and CO2 in the process
(cellular respiration).
Water is also central to acid-base neutrality and
enzyme function. An acid, a hydrogen ion (H+, that is, a proton)
donor, can be neutralized by a base, a proton acceptor such as
hydroxide ion (OH−) to form water. Water is considered to be
neutral, with a pH (the negative log of
the hydrogen ion concentration) of 7. Acids have pH values
less than 7 while bases
have values greater than 7. Stomach acid (HCl) is useful to
digestion. However, its corrosive effect on the esophagus during
reflux can temporarily be neutralized by ingestion of a base such
as aluminum
hydroxide to produce the neutral molecules water and the salt
aluminum chloride. Human biochemistry that involves enzymes usually
performs optimally around a biologically neutral pH of 7.4.
For example a cell of Escherichia
coli contains 70% of water, a human body 60-70%, plant body up
to 90% and the body of an adult jellyfish is made up of 94–98%
water.
Aquatic life forms
Earth's waters are filled with life. The earliest life forms appeared in water; nearly all fish live exclusively in water, and there are many types of marine mammals, such as dolphins and whales that also live in the water. Some kinds of animals, such as amphibians, spend portions of their lives in water and portions on land. Plants such as kelp and algae grow in the water and are the basis for some underwater ecosystems. Plankton is generally the foundation of the ocean food chain.Aquatic animals must obtain oxygen to survive,
and they do so in various ways. Fish have gills instead of lungs, although some species of
fish, such as the lungfish, have both. Marine
mammals, such as dolphins, whales, otters, and seals need to surface
periodically to breathe air. Smaller life forms are able to absorb
oxygen through their skin.
Effects on human civilization
Civilization has historically flourished around rivers and major waterways; Mesopotamia, the so-called cradle of civilization, was situated between the major rivers Tigris and Euphrates; the ancient society of the Egyptians depended entirely upon the Nile. Large metropolises like Rotterdam, London, Montreal, Paris, New York City, Shanghai, Tokyo, Chicago, and Hong Kong owe their success in part to their easy accessibility via water and the resultant expansion of trade. Islands with safe water ports, like Singapore, have flourished for the same reason. In places such as North Africa and the Middle East, where water is more scarce, access to clean drinking water was and is a major factor in human development.Health and pollution
Water fit for human consumption is called drinking water or potable water. Water that is not potable can be made potable by filtration or distillation (heating it until it becomes water vapor, and then capturing the vapor without any of the impurities it leaves behind), or by other methods (chemical or heat treatment that kills bacteria). Sometimes the term safe water is applied to potable water of a lower quality threshold (i.e., it is used effectively for nutrition in humans that have weak access to water cleaning processes, and does more good than harm). Water that is not fit for drinking but is not harmful for humans when used for swimming or bathing is called by various names other than potable or drinking water, and is sometimes called safe water, or "safe for bathing". Chlorine is a skin and mucous membrane irritant that is used to make water safe for bathing or drinking. Its use is highly technical and is usually monitored by government regulations (typically 1 part per million (ppm) for drinking water, and 1-2 ppm of chlorine not yet reacted with impurities for bathing water).This natural resource is becoming scarcer in
certain places, and its availability is a major social and economic
concern. Currently, about 1 billion people around the
world routinely drink unhealthy water. Most countries accepted the
goal of halving by 2015 the number of people worldwide who do not
have access to safe water and sanitation during the
2003
G8 Evian summit. Even if this difficult goal is met, it will
still leave more than an estimated half a billion people without
access to safe drinking water and over 1 billion without
access to adequate sanitation. Poor water
quality and bad sanitation are deadly; some 5 million
deaths a year are caused by polluted drinking water. Water,
however, is not a finite resource, but rather re-circulated as
potable water in precipitation in quantities many degrees of
magnitude higher than human consumption. Therefore, it is the
relatively small quantity of water in reserve in the earth (about
1% of our drinking water
supply, which is replenished in aquifers around every 1 to 10
years), that is a non-renewable resource, and it is, rather, the
distribution of potable and irrigation water which is scarce,
rather than the actual amount of it that exists on the earth.
Water-poor countries use importation of goods as the primary method
of importing water (to leave enough for local human consumption),
since the manufacturing process uses around 10 to 100 times
products' masses in water.
In the developing world, 90% of all wastewater still goes
untreated into local rivers and streams. Some 50 countries, with
roughly a third of the world’s population, also suffer from medium
or high water stress, and 17 of these extract more water annually
than is recharged through their natural water cycles. The strain
not only affects surface freshwater bodies like rivers and lakes,
but it also degrades groundwater resources.
Human uses
Agriculture
The most important use of water in agriculture is for an irrigation and irrigation is key component to produce enough food. Irrigation takes up to 90% of water withdrawn in some developing countries.As a scientific standard
On 7 April 1795, the gram was defined in France to be equal to "the absolute weight of a volume of pure water equal to a cube of one hundredth of a meter, and to the temperature of the melting ice." For practical purposes though, a metallic reference standard was required, one thousand times more massive, the kilogram. Work was therefore commissioned to determine precisely how massive one liter of water was. In spite of the fact that the decreed definition of the gram specified water at 0 °C—a highly stable temperature point—the scientists chose to redefine the standard and to perform their measurements at the most stable density point: the temperature at which water reaches maximum density, which was measured at the time as 4 °C.The Kelvin
temperature scale of the SI system is based on the triple point
of water. The scale is a more accurate development of the Celsius
temperature scale, which is defined by the boiling
point (100 °C) and melting
point (0 °C) of water.
Natural water consists mainly of the isotopes
hydrogen-1 and oxygen-16, but there is also small quantity of
heavier hydrogen-2 (deuterium). The amount of deuterium oxides or
heavy
water is very small, but it still affects the properties of
water. Water from rivers and lakes tends to contain less deuterium
than seawater. Therefore, a standard water called
Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water is defined as the standard
water.
For drinking
The human body is anywhere from 55% to 78% water depending on body size. To function properly, the body requires between one and seven liters of water per day to avoid dehydration; the precise amount depends on the level of activity, temperature, humidity, and other factors. Most of this is ingested through foods or beverages other than drinking straight water. It is not clear how much water intake is needed by healthy people, though most advocates agree that 6–7 glasses of water (approximately 2 litres) daily is the minimum to maintain proper hydration. Medical literature favors a lower consumption, typically 1 liter of water for an average male, excluding extra requirements due to fluid loss from exercise or warm weather. For those who have healthy kidneys, it is rather difficult to drink too much water, but (especially in warm humid weather and while exercising) it is dangerous to drink too little. People can drink far more water than necessary while exercising, however, putting them at risk of water intoxication (hyperhydration), which can be fatal. The "fact" that a person should consume eight glasses of water per day cannot be traced back to a scientific source. There are other myths such as the effect of water on weight loss and constipation that have been dispelled.An original recommendation for water intake in
1945 by the Food
and Nutrition Board of the National
Research Council read: "An ordinary standard for diverse
persons is 1 milliliter for each calorie of food. Most of this
quantity is contained in prepared foods." The latest dietary
reference intake report by the
United States National Research Council in general recommended
(including food sources): 2.7 liters of water total for women and
3.7 liters for men. Specifically, pregnant and
breastfeeding
women need additional fluids to stay hydrated. According to the
Institute
of Medicine—who recommend that, on average, women
consume 2.2 litres and men 3.0 litres—this is recommended
to be 2.4 litres (approx. 9 cups) for pregnant women and 3 litres
(approx. 12.5 cups) for breastfeeding women since an especially
large amount of fluid is lost during nursing. Also noted is that
normally, about 20 percent of water intake comes from food, while
the rest comes from drinking water and beverages (caffeinated
included). Water is excreted from the body in multiple forms;
through urine and feces, through sweating, and by exhalation of
water
vapor in the breath. With physical exertion and heat exposure,
water loss will increase and daily fluid needs may increase as
well.
Humans require water that does not contain too
many impurities. Common impurities include metal salts and/or
harmful bacteria, such
as Vibrio.
Some solutes are
acceptable and even desirable for taste enhancement and to provide
needed electrolytes.
The single largest freshwater resource suitable
for drinking is Lake Baikal
in Siberia, which has a very low salt and calcium content and is very
clean.
As a dissolving agent or solvent
Dissolving (or suspending) is used to wash everyday items such as the human body, clothes, floors, cars, food, and pets. Also, human wastes are carried by water in the sewage system. Its use as a cleaning solvent consumes most of water in industrialized countries.Water can facilitate the chemical processing of
wastewater. An
aqueous environment can be favourable to the breakdown of
pollutants, due to the ability to gain an homogenous solution that
is pumpable and flexible to treat. Aerobic treatment can be used by
applying oxygen or air to a solution reduce the reactivity of
substances within it.
Water also facilitates biological processing of
waste that have been
dissolved within it. Microorganisms that live within water can
access dissolved wastes and can feed upon them breaking them down
into less polluting substances. Reedbeds and
anaerobic
digesters are both examples of biological systems that are
particularly suited to the treatment of effluents.
Typically from both chemical and biological
treatment of wastes, there is often a solid residue or cake that is
left over from the treatment process. Depending upon its
constituent parts, this 'cake' may be dried and spread on land as a
fertilizer if it has beneficial properties, or alternatively
disposed of in landfill
or incinerated.
Water is the most abundant molecule in
organisms.Fruits shrink when they are dried because they consist
primarly of water.
As a heat transfer fluid
Water and steam are used as heat transfer fluids
in diverse heat exchange systems, due to its availability and high
heat capacity, both as a coolant and for heating. Cool water may
even be naturally available from a lake or the sea. Condensing
steam is a particularly
efficient heating fluid because of the large heat of vaporization.
A disadvantage is that water and steam are somewhat corrosive. In
almost all electric power plants, water is the coolant, which
vaporizes and drives steam turbines to drive
generators.
In the nuclear industry, water can also be used
as a neutron
moderator. In a pressurized
water reactor, water is both a coolant and a moderator. This
provides a passive safety measure, as removing the water from the
reactor also slows the nuclear reaction down.
Extinguishing fires
Water has a high heat of vaporization and is relatively inert, which makes it a good fire extinguishing fluid. The evaporation of water carries heat away from the fire. However, water cannot be used to fight fires of electric equipment, because impure water is electrically conductive, or of oils and organic solvents, because they float on water and the explosive boiling of water tends to spread the burning liquid.Decomposition of water may have played a role in
the Chernobyl
disaster. Initially, cooling of the incandescent reactor was
attempted, but the result was an explosion, when the extreme heat
caused water to flash into steam, thus leading to a steam
explosion; it may also have decomposed water into hydrogen and
oxygen, which subsequently exploded.
Chemical uses
Organic reactions are usually quenched with water or a water solution of a suitable acid, base or buffer. Water is generally effective in removing inorganic salts. In inorganic reactions, water is a common solvent. In organic reactions, it is usually not used as a reaction solvent, because it does not dissolve the reactants well and is amphoteric (acidic and basic) and nucleophilic. Nevertheless, these properties are sometimes desirable. Also, acceleration of Diels-Alder reactions by water has been observed. Supercritical water has recently been a topic of research. Oxygen-saturated supercritical water combusts organic pollutants efficiently.Recreation
Humans use water for many recreational purposes, as well as for exercising and for sports. Some of these include swimming, waterskiing, boating, and diving. In addition, some sports, like ice hockey and ice skating, are played on ice. Lakesides, beaches and waterparks are popular places for people to go to relax and enjoy recreation. Many find the sound of flowing water to be calming, too. Some keep fish and other life in aquariums or ponds for show, fun, and companionship. Humans also use water for snow sports i.e. skiing or snowboarding, which requires the water to be frozen. People may also use water for play fighting such as with snowballs, water guns or water balloons. They may also make fountains and use water in their public or private decorations.Water industry
The water industry provides drinking water and wastewater services (including sewage treatment) to households and industry.Water supply
facilities includes for example water wells
cisterns for rainwater
harvesting, water
supply network, water
purification facilities, water tanks,
water
towers, water pipes
including old aqueducts.
Atmospheric water generator is in development.
Drinking water is often collected at springs,
extracted from artificial borings
in the ground, or wells. Building more wells in adequate places is
thus a possible way to produce more water, assuming the aquifers
can supply an adequate flow. Other water sources are rainwater and
river or lake water. This surface water, however, must be purified
for human consumption. This may involve removal of undissolved
substances, dissolved substances and harmful microbes. Popular methods are
filtering
with sand which only removes undissolved material, while chlorination and boiling kill harmful microbes.
Distillation
does all three functions. More advanced techniques exist, such as
reverse
osmosis. Desalination
of abundant ocean or
seawater is a more
expensive solution used in coastal arid climates.
The distribution of drinking water is done
through municipal
water systems or as bottled
water. Governments in many countries have programs to
distribute water to the needy at no charge. Others argue that the
market mechanism and
free
enterprise are best to manage this rare resource and to finance
the boring of wells or the construction of dams and reservoirs.
Reducing waste by using drinking water only for
human consumption is another option. In some cities such as
Hong
Kong, sea water is extensively used for flushing toilets
citywide in order to conserve
fresh water resources.
Polluting water may be the biggest single misuse
of water; to the extent that a pollutant limits other uses of the
water, it becomes a waste of the resource, regardless of benefits
to the polluter. Like other types of pollution, this does not enter
standard accounting of market costs, being conceived as externalities for which the
market cannot account. Thus other people pay the price of water
pollution, while the private firms' profits are not redistributed
to the local population victim of this pollution. Pharmaceuticals
consumed by humans often end up in the waterways and can have
detrimental effects on aquatic
life if they bioaccumulate and if
they are not biodegradable.
Wastewater facilities are sewers and wastewater
treatment plants. Another way to remove pollution from surface
runoff water is bioswale.
Industrial applications
Water is used in power generation. Hydroelectricity is electricity obtained from hydropower. Hydroelectric power comes from water driving a water turbine connected to a generator. Hydroelectricity is a low-cost, non-polluting, renewable energy source. The energy is supplied by the sun. Heat from the sun evaporates water, which condenses as rain in higher altitudes, from where it flows down.Pressurized water is used in water
blasting and water jet
cutters. Also, very high pressure water guns are used for
precise cutting. It works very well, is relatively safe, and is not
harmful to the environment. It is also used in the cooling of
machinery to prevent over-heating, or prevent saw blades from
over-heating.
Water is also used in many industrial processes
and machines, such as the steam
turbine and heat
exchanger, in addition to its use as a chemical solvent. Discharge of untreated
water from industrial uses is pollution. Pollution includes
discharged solutes (chemical
pollution) and discharged coolant water (thermal pollution).
Industry requires pure water for many applications and utilizes a
variety of purification
techniques both in water supply and discharge.
Food processing
Water plays many critical roles within the field of food science. It is important for a food scientist to understand the roles that water plays within food processing to ensure the success of their products.Solutes such as salts and sugars found in water
affect the physical properties of water. The boiling and freezing
points of water is affected by solutes. One mole of
sucrose (sugar) raises the boiling point of water by 0.52 °C, and
one mole of salt raises the boiling point by 1.04 °C while lowering
the freezing point of water in a similar way. Solutes in water also
affect water activity which affects many chemical reactions and the
growth of microbes in food. Water activity can be described as a
ratio of the vapor pressure of water in a solution to the vapor
pressure of pure water.
The Ancient Greek philosopher Empedocles held
that water is one of the four classical
elements along with fire, earth and air,
and was regarded as the ylem, or basic substance of the
universe. Water was considered cold and moist. In the theory of the
four bodily
humors, water was associated with phlegm. Water
was also one of the
five elements in traditional Chinese
philosophy, along with earth,
fire,
wood,
and metal.
Water also plays an important role in literature
as a symbol of purification. Examples
include the critical importance of a river in As I Lay
Dying by William
Faulkner and the drowning of Ophelia in Hamlet.
Sherlock
Holmes held that "From a drop of water, a logician could infer
the possibility of an Atlantic
or a Niagara
without having seen or heard of one or the other."
sisterlinks water
References
Further reading
- Principles of Food Chemistry 3rd Edition
- Essentials of Food Science 2nd Edition
- OA Jones, JN Lester and N Voulvoulis, Pharmaceuticals: a threat to drinking water? TRENDS in Biotechnology 23(4): 163, 2005
- Franks, F (Ed), Water, A comprehensive treatise, Plenum Press, New York, 1972-1982
- PH Gleick and associates, The World's Water: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources. Island Press, Washington, D.C. (published every two years, beginning in 1998.)
- Marks, William E., The Holy Order of Water: Healing Earth's Waters and Ourselves. Bell Pond Books ( a div. of Steiner Books), Great Barrington, MA, November 2001 [ISBN 0-88010-483-X]
- Debenedetti, P. G., and Stanley, H. E.; "Supercooled and Glassy Water", Physics Today 56 (6), p. 40–46 (2003). Downloadable PDF (1.9 MB)
- Water SA
Water as a natural resource
- The World's Water: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources (November 10, 2006)| ISBN-13: 9781597261050]
- Last Oasis: Facing Water Scarcity
- Water Rights: Scarce Resource Allocation, Bureaucracy, and the Environment
- Water: The Fate of Our Most Precious Resource
- Water Wars: Drought, Flood, Folly and the Politics of Thirst
- Water and Power: The Politics of a Scarce Resource in the Jordan River Basin (Cambridge Middle East Library)
- Rivers of Empire: Water, Aridity, and the Growth of the American West
- Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water
- Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World's Water
- Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit
- Troubled Water: Saints, Sinners, Truth And Lies About The Global Water Crisis
- The Holy Order of Water: Healing Earths Waters and Ourselves
watering in Tosk Albanian: Wasser
watering in Amharic: ውሃ
watering in Arabic: ماء
watering in Aragonese: Augua
watering in Official Aramaic (700-300 BCE):
ܡܝܐ
watering in Asturian: Agua
watering in Guarani: Y
watering in Aymara: Uma
watering in Azerbaijani: Su
watering in Bambara: Ji
watering in Bengali: পানি
watering in Min Nan: Chúi
watering in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Вада
watering in Bavarian: Wossa
watering in Bosnian: Voda
watering in Breton: Dour
watering in Bulgarian: Вода
watering in Catalan: Aigua
watering in Chuvash: Шыв
watering in Cebuano: Tubig
watering in Czech: Voda
watering in Chamorro: Hånom
watering in Zhuang: Raemx
watering in Welsh: Dŵr
watering in Danish: Vand
watering in Pennsylvania German: Wasser
watering in German: Wasser
watering in Navajo: Tó
watering in Estonian: Vesi
watering in Modern Greek (1453-): Νερό
watering in Emiliano-Romagnolo: Aqua
watering in Spanish: Agua
watering in Esperanto: Akvo
watering in Basque: Ur
watering in Persian: آب
watering in French: Eau
watering in Friulian: Aghe
watering in Irish: Uisce
watering in Manx: Ushtey
watering in Scottish Gaelic: Uisge
watering in Galician: Auga
watering in Kikuyu: Mai
watering in Classical Chinese: 水
watering in Korean: 물
watering in Armenian: Ջուր
watering in Hindi: पानी
watering in Upper Sorbian: Woda
watering in Croatian: Voda
watering in Ido: Aquo
watering in Indonesian: Air
watering in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Aqua
watering in Interlingue: Aqua
watering in Zulu: Amanzi
watering in Icelandic: Vatn
watering in Italian: Acqua
watering in Hebrew: מים
watering in Javanese: Banyu
watering in Kannada: ನೀರು
watering in Georgian: წყალი
watering in Kinyarwanda: Amazi
watering in Swahili (macrolanguage): Maji
watering in Kongo: Maza
watering in Kurdish: Av
watering in Ladino: Agua
watering in Latin: Aqua
watering in Latvian: Ūdens
watering in Luxembourgish: Waasser
watering in Lithuanian: Vanduo
watering in Lingala: Mái
watering in Lojban: djacu
watering in Lombard: Acqua
watering in Hungarian: Víz
watering in Macedonian: Вода
watering in Malagasy: Rano
watering in Malayalam: ജലം
watering in Marathi: पाणी
watering in Malay (macrolanguage): Air
watering in Min Dong Chinese: Cūi
nah:Ātl
watering in Dutch: Water
watering in Dutch Low Saxon: Woater
watering in Cree: ᓃᐲᔾ
watering in Nepali: पानी
watering in Japanese: 水
watering in Norwegian: Vann
watering in Norwegian Nynorsk: Vatn
watering in Narom: Ieau
watering in Occitan (post 1500): Aiga
watering in Oromo: Bishaan (water)
watering in Uzbek: Suv
watering in Low German: Water
watering in Polish: Woda
watering in Portuguese: Água
watering in Kölsch: Wasser
watering in Romanian: Apă
watering in Quechua: Yaku
watering in Russian: Вода
watering in Sardinian: Aba
watering in Albanian: Uji
watering in Sicilian: Acqua (vìppita)
watering in Simple English: Water
watering in Silesian: Woda
watering in Slovenian: Voda
watering in Serbian: Вода
watering in Sundanese: Cai
watering in Finnish: Vesi
watering in Swedish: Vatten
watering in Tagalog: Tubig
watering in Tamil: நீர்
watering in Telugu: నీరు
watering in Thai: น้ำ
watering in Vietnamese: Nước
watering in Tajik: Об
watering in Cherokee: ᎠᎹ
watering in Turkish: Su
watering in Ukrainian: Вода
watering in Venetian: Aqua
watering in Volapük: Vat
watering in Vlaams: Woater
watering in Wu Chinese: 水
watering in Yiddish: וואסער
watering in Yoruba: Omi
watering in Contenese: 水
watering in Samogitian: Ondou
watering in Chinese: 水
watering in Slovak: Voda
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adulteration, affusion, aspergation, aspersion, baptism, bastardizing, bath, bathing, bedewing, contamination, corruption, cutting, dampening, damping, debasement, deluge, dewing, dilution, doctoring, drenching, drowning, excretory, flooding, fortifying, hosing, hosing down, humectant, humidification, immersion, inundation, irrigation, irrigational, irriguous, lachrymal, lachrymose, lacing, lacrimatory, lactational, lacteal, lacteous, laving, moistening, pollution, rheumy, rinsing, salivant, salivary, salivous, secretional, secretive, secretory, seminal, serous, sialagogic, soaking, sopping, sparging, spattering, spermatic, spiking, splashing, splattering, spraying, sprinkling, submersion, swashing, watery, wetting