Home

Hydro

Hydro is a combining form derived from the Greek hydor, meaning water. It is used across science and engineering to indicate water-related phenomena, processes, or materials. As a prefix, hydro- signals that water plays a central role in the topic.

In science and engineering, hydro appears in hydrology (the study of water's distribution and movement on Earth),

In energy and agriculture, hydroelectric power uses flowing water to generate electricity; pumped-storage and run-of-river schemes

In environmental and resource management, hydro-related fields address flood control, irrigation, dam design, and the environmental

Because it functions as a prefix rather than a standalone concept, the precise meaning of hydro- depends

hydraulics
(the
practical
handling
of
fluids
in
machines
and
structures),
hydrogeology
(groundwater),
and
hydrography
(mapping
bodies
of
water).
It
also
occurs
in
hydrochemical,
hydrometeorological,
and
related
terms
that
describe
water’s
chemical,
atmospheric,
or
environmental
aspects.
are
common
approaches.
Hydroponics
describes
growing
plants
in
a
nutrient
solution
without
soil.
Hydrotherapy,
or
therapeutic
use
of
water,
appears
in
medical
and
rehabilitative
contexts.
impacts
of
water
infrastructure,
including
ecosystem
changes
and
sediment
transport.
Climate
and
weather
sciences
use
hydro-related
concepts
in
studying
the
hydrological
cycle
and
hydrometeorology,
which
describe
how
water
moves
through
the
atmosphere,
land,
and
oceans.
on
the
word
it
accompanies.
In
general,
however,
it
denotes
water
or
water-related
phenomena.