yes bar is a measure of pressure which doesnt change for different gases
To avoid accumulation of moisture.
Not unless it is a dried out sponge full of air.
Yes the density of a Hershey's bar is more than a three musketeers bar. The solid chocolate bar is more dense than the tasty nougat bar full of gas
"Because the pressure will cause the heart to explode." Well, no (the heart cannot "explode" anyways, rupture yes, but I'll leave it at that for now). The main problem is the pressure differential on the surface compaired to the lungs which are submerged. At one meter's depth the water adds 0,1 bar of pressure to the atmospheres 1 bar. This means that the lungs which are compressed to 1,1 bar (1 bar ATM and 0,1 bar of water) must overcome the pressure, making breathing impossible since the air cannot be drawn into the lungs.
Bar pendulum has lesser air friction while it oscillates to and fro.
They go to a air bar and put more air in the tyres.
If the gas is normal air (~20-22% oxygen), the maximum recommended depth of most dive organisations is in the region of 50-60m. The reason for this is that the deeper you go, the higher the pressure of the water. For example, on the surface, the pressure is 1 bar, 10m is 2 bar, 20m is 3 bar 30m is 4 bar etc. Oxygen becomes toxic to the human body at about 1.6 bar so if you are at 70m, with a mix of 20% oxygen, you are at 8 bar of pressure. At 8 bar, the parital pressure of oxygen is 1.6 bar, enough to become toxic. So compressed air becomes dangerous at 70m so most organisations advise to go no deeper than 50-60m. If you use a different gas blend, such as Nitrox ar Trimix, the amount of oxygen is different so the depths are different too. In summary, on compressed air, the maximum is about 70m, recommended 50-60m max.
there are moe calories in a snickers bar than the starbucks latte
there are moe calories in a snickers bar than the Starbucks latte
there are moe calories in a snickers bar than the Starbucks latte
there are moe calories in a snickers bar than the Starbucks latte