The term ground is specified as a conducting link by which a circuit or device is connected to the earth. The link is used for establishing and keeping as closely as possible the potential of the ground on the circuit or device linked to it.
Grounding techniques are a set of simple strategies to detach yourself from emotional pain (for example: feelings of panic, self-harm impulses, anger/rage, and intense sadness). You can also think of grounding as “centering,” “finding a safe place,” or “healthy detachment.” WHY DO GROUNDING?
After a trauma, it’s normal to experience flashbacks, anxiety, and other uncomfortable symptoms. Grounding techniques help control these symptoms by turning attention away from thoughts, memories, or worries, and refocusing on the present moment.
Infiltration: flow of water from above to below ground. Spring: emergence of groundwater at the surface through a steady flow. Surface Water: water above ground, such as lakes, rivers, streams, ponds, floodwater, and runoff.
Groundwater is recharged from rain water and snowmelt or from water that leaks through the bottom of some lakes and rivers. Groundwater also can be recharged when water-supply systems (pipelines and canals) leak and when crops are irrigated with more water than the plants can use.
The ground segment is a critical part of the end-to-end science data return, and it includes all the ground-based elements that are used to collect and disseminate information from the satellite to the user (figure 11.1).
In North Carolina, groundwater does not typically occur in vast underground lakes, pools, or rivers. Groundwater actually occurs and flows through empty spaces between soil grains and rock fractures. The image above represents soil particles (yellow circles) and flowing groundwater (blue arrows).