due to 2004 tsunami
Dirt under water.
The buoyant force is equal to the weight of the displaced water.
The gas that you see coming out of water when it is boiling is water vapour being produced because the temperature and pressure are right at a given point in time. Air in water such as the bubbles you see collect on objects submerged in water or the air that fish breathe is dissolved into the water at point of contact.
Depends on the pressure the water is under, but normal water will freeze.
The straw gives energy to dissolved gases in the liquid, be those gases oxygen, or whatever. The energy given to the gases causes those gases to come out of solution in the water, and to collect on the surface of the straw.
It would only be redundant if the context had already made it unambiguous that it was water. It is possible to be submerged under any liquid: for example french fries are cooked submerged under hot oil (they can't be cooked submerged under hot water).Yes, "submerged underwater" is redundant. Submerged under anything is redundant since the prefix "sub-" means "under." In most cases, the use of "submerged" alone is sufficient. In case there is some question about the substance something is submerged in (not necessarily liquid, not necessarily tangible), you might occasionally have use for "submerged in water."
The word submerged means it was under water instead of above the water.
submerged , under water
Dirt under water.
It is called being submerged.
The light rays from the submerged part of the objects are bent when they cross the water-air interface.
They don't. When submerged, dolphins hold their breath.
The Submerged Lands Act of 1953 gives states the right to the land under water such as land under rivers and lakes. It also means coastal water up to 3 miles out belong to the state.
Hippos are born under water, they can stay submerged for extended periods.
Junk it! It will be a money pit if you try to save it.
It survives entirely under water and is known as a submergent
Hum, just what are you gonna use to color vinyl either under water or out of water???? NO.