Most of the back ones fell over. I will look to cool things off now that trichome production is stepping up. Nope, they are all falling over.
Just destroying the distilled water intake,
Well, she is far from aesthetically pleasing but the goal was never bag appeal, at least not on this grow, this was balls to the wall with a slew of personal mini experiments to see what happens, how pretty/burnt the fan/sugar leaves look has no bearing on the quality of the smoke, that I know, 8-10 hours of UVB @ 4-500mW/cm2 for almost the entirety of the flower, acclimation, and tolerance built up with a full dose from early veg, the intense 1600-1800ppfd light intensity, way into 60moles on those highest colas. Isn't she supposed to have disintegrated 3 weeks ago with those exposure levels? What did I think would happen? I dunno, I wasn't thinking.
Evaporation
Evaporation is the transformation of liquid water into water vapour. It's a key process in the hydrological cycle, influencing climate and weather patterns globally.
Factors Affecting Evaporation Rates
Several factors impact how quickly evaporation occurs:
Temperature: Higher temperatures accelerate evaporation. As temperature increases, water molecules gain kinetic energy, making it easier for them to escape the liquid’s surface and become vapour.
Wind Speed: Wind removes moist air above a water body, facilitating further evaporation. Faster winds replace saturated air with drier air, enhancing evaporation rates.
Humidity: Low humidity levels increase evaporation. When the surrounding air is dry, it can absorb more water vapour, promoting evaporation from water surfaces.
Sunlight Exposure: Sunlight provides the energy necessary for evaporation. More sunlight equals more evaporation, as it heats the water and provides energy for water molecules to escape into the air.
Surface Area: A larger surface area allows more water to be exposed to air, hence increasing evaporation. Bodies of water with larger surface areas, like lakes, have higher evaporation rates than smaller bodies.
Energy Requirements
Evaporation is an endothermic process, meaning it absorbs heat. This heat, known as the latent heat of vaporisation, is necessary to break the molecular bonds of liquid water, allowing it to transition into a gas.
https://www.tutorchase.com/notes/cie-a-level/geography/2-3-1-atmospheric-moisture-processes