Ironclads are not the same thing as submarines. Ironclads do not go underwater completely even though the majority of their body may be underwater.
their not
Yes, but U-boat is confined to German subs. the word is literally Unterseeboot- Undersea Boat, which is what a submarine is.
They have the same shape and travel thru the same elements.
Yes. It was fought between the newly-formed Confederate States of America and what was left of the USA, normally referred-to as the Union. (1861-65)
They work off the same principle of magnets.
This is a hard question to answer... Almost all nations have submarines, but I am not sure if they have all used them in the same war. I would be they all used them in WW2 or the cold war
The submarines in WW2 are different from now. I have done research and back then submarines were easily sunk and were ran differently ! How were they ran differently ? Back then in WW2 the submarines used, were smaller ... They were ran by Diesel engines which allowed them to high surface speed and long range, but underwater it was very difficult and the speed and range wasn't the same from out of the water.
To determine how many submarines weigh the same as a mole of rice, we first need to know the weight of a mole of rice. A mole of rice is approximately 18 grams (considering rice's average molar mass). In comparison, a typical submarine weighs around 2,000 tons (or about 1,814,369 kilograms). Therefore, it would take an impractically large number of submarines, roughly 1,000,000 submarines, to equal the weight of a mole of rice.
They are mapped by sonar. The same technology they use to detect submarines from battleships / carriers.
Answer US submarines were named after fish and sea creatures, the letter starting with the same letter as the class name, for example: Salmon Class, USS Skipjack, Tambor Class, USS Thresher.
No, they are not the same thing. Mean and average are the same thing.
the same thing she did