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Cycles
A cycle
is a pattern that repeats. There are a lot cycles within the Earth
system. You see cycles every day. In fact, the "day" is a cycle.
A day
is the time it takes the Earth to make one complete spin on its
axis. This cycle repeats about every 24 hours. In most parts of
the world, each day is a cycle of light and darkness. Half of the
day we face the sun. It is daytime then. The other half of the day
we do not. It is nighttime then.
Below
is a diagram of the cycle of a day. Four things happen during this
cycle. Daytime, sunset, nighttime, and sunrise all happen during
a day. In the diagram, these four things are connected in a circle.
They form a continuous loop. That is another way to think about
cycles. Cycles are loops. They have no beginning. They have no ending.
However,
the parts of a cycle do happen in a certain order. For example,
daytime comes before sunset. Sunset comes before nighttime. Nighttime
comes before sunrise. Sunrise comes before daytime.

Cycles
repeat over different lengths of time. Some cycles are very short.
They do not take much time to repeat. Other cycles are very long.
They take a lot of time to repeat. As mentioned above, the cycle
of a day takes about 24 hours to complete. Another cycle you may
know takes a whole year before it repeats. It is the cycle of the
seasons.
Seasons are patterns of weather changes. Many places in the world
have four seasons. They have a hot and dry summer. Then it cools
during the autumn. Then it gets cold during the winter. Then it
gets warm and wet in the spring. After spring, it is summer again.
Below is a diagram of a cycle of seasons.

Living
things go through cycles, too. These cycles are called life cycles.
Living things are born, live, then die. The length of the life cycle
is different for each living thing. For example, some insects live
only for a few days, while some trees live for hundreds of years.
Cycles
also happen in each of Earth's spheres. For example, water changes
among three physical forms, or phases. Water moves from Earth's
surface to the air and back again as it changes form. Water can
change from a liquid to a gas. When it does, it moves from Earth's
surface to the air. Water can also change from a gas to a liquid
or a solid. Liquid and solid water become too heavy to stay in the
air. They fall from the air to Earth's surface. This movement of
water is a repeating pattern. It is called the water cycle. Temperature
drives the water cycle. Changes in temperature cause water to change
its form. Temperatures below 0 °C cause liquid water to freeze
into a solid. Solid water is called ice. At temperatures between
0 °C and 100 °C, ice melts to form liquid water. Temperatures
above 100 °C cause liquid water to become a gas. The gas is
called water vapor.
Many
cycles on Earth are related to each other. Related cycles connect
Earth's spheres. For example, the cycle of seasons is often related
to the life cycle of plants. These related cycles connect Earth's
living things with its air and water. As seasons change, so does
the temperature and amount of water available to a plant. Temperature
and the amount of water available affect plant growth. That is how
the life cycle of plants is connected to the cycle of seasons. Below
is a diagram of this connection.

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