Evaporation-Best-Of.mp3
Evaporation-Best-Of.mp4
Evaporation.mp3
Evaporation.mp4
Evaporation-intro.mp3
[Verse 1]
When the air’s so thick
You’re dripping in it
(Your pores can pour no more)
[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Bass]
As thick as a brick
Can’t shake a stick
(Check your core temperature)
[Bridge]
Can you endure
(No more)
[Chorus]
Nevermore
No, no never again
(Can’t get in)
There’s no room for you
Nevermore
Not night or day
No, not the way
Things are going
(The obvious is showing)
[Refrain]
Are you thirstier
(I’m not sure)
Sure, the temperature
(What’s your moisture?)
[Verse 2]
Madge, you’re soaking in it
You’re drippin’… (within without)
No doubt… (that’s not workin’ out)
Thick air on skin
No body (nobody) will win
(The land cannot withstand man)
[Bridge]
Can you endure
(No more)
[Chorus]
Nevermore
No, no never again
(Can’t get in)
There’s no room for you
Nevermore
Not night or day
No, not the way
Things are going
(The obvious is showing)
[Outro]
Are you thirstier
(I’m not sure)
Sure, the temperature
(What’s your moisture?)
A SCIENCE NOTE: Evaporation. Does what evaporate faster when it is less humid?
Yes — when the air is less humid, evaporation happens faster. Evaporation is the process of molecules at the surface of a liquid escaping into the air as vapor. The rate of evaporation depends partly on how much water vapor is already in the air. Relative humidity measures how close the air is to being saturated (100% humidity = no more room for water vapor).
When humidity is low, the air is “thirstier” for water vapor, so more liquid molecules can escape into it before equilibrium is reached. When humidity is high, the air is already holding a lot of water vapor, so the difference between the liquid’s vapor pressure and the air’s vapor content is small, slowing evaporation.
From the album “More On“