False
These themophiles would be classified as archeabacteria. These bacteria inhabit extreme living conditions such as high heat and high pressure.
pressure, temperature, light and salinity
if the well pressure switch goes with the tank then the second floor pressure would more closely match the well pressure setpoints and the ground floor would have slightly higher pressure. with the tank and pressure switch on the lower floor the lower floor would more closely see the well pressure setpoints and the second floor would get slightly lower pressure.
A lack of light, and the increase atmosheric pressure
Pressure increases as you approach the ocean floor.
In all probability you cannot. Laminate is made of MDF board and once it has been wet, it usually will not flatten out. MDF is made with extreme pressure to make it flat.
The archeobacteria. Very primitive bacteria that live in extreme conditions - hot springs, thermal vents on the ocean floor, extremely salty saline pools and even in Antarctic ice
Reference pressure less the height.
When you stand on a floor you are being pulled down by gravity but are applying force only to one side of the floor. Air is also being pulled down by gravity but because it surround the floor it applies force equally on both sides of the floor making it appear as though there is no force at all. Think of an empty plastic milk jug. If you simply screw the cover on the top the shape will stay the same because there is equal air pressure inside and outside the jug. Now put a vacuum cleaner hose on the open top of the jug. The jug will collapse because the air pressure is now only being applied to one side of the jug wall. Getting back to the floor, if you sealed up the basement and were able to suck all of the air out, the pressure from the air in the living room (and all the air above it) would probably cause the floor to collapse in exactly the same way it would if you had too many people standing on it.
That has got to do with the light shell of the egg and the pressure inside of the yolk moving downward. The pressure is then forced upwards from the floor and the shell can't cope. It has the floor pushing up and the yolk pushing down with gravity. The shell isn't made to support that kind of pressure and cracks.
it depends on your weight dofus
The answer is unquestionably, "NO". Water is very heavy. If you put one foot of water in a 10x15 living room, it would weight over 8,000 pounds. The floor was never designed to support this kind of weight. Even if the floor could, the walls could never support the pressure. Tom