False
A structural problem on a submarine may make it possible for that vessel to be crushed as it descends. It may or may not be likely to be crushed, and that would depend on the nature of the problem and how deep the submarine descended.
False
Submarine hulls are subject to sea pressure, and that pressure increases the deeper the submarine goes. There are design limits to the amount of pressure that a hull can take, and if that pressure is exceeded by diving too deep, the hull will fail and will be crushed.
The pressure exerted on the hull of the sub will get too great and crush it.
there is too much water pressure so it will be crushed under all the weight.
Unless the flooding and buoyancy was controlled, the submarine would continue to dive into the depths, possibly to be crushed by the great pressure of water.
The pressure on a submarine increases the deeper you get (about 1 bar for every 10 meters), so the answer to your question is, "It depends how deep you want to go." Sadly, most of these figures on thicknesses are classified, so you'll have to calculate that yourself.
They are crushed
Pressure on the inside is the same as the pressure on the outside. No different from why doesn't the air pressure of 15 psi not squeeze us flat.
The fluids in your body also exert pressure.
He stared into the abyss.The abyss was so deep that the unmanned submarine was crushed under the pressure of the water.They wanted to know how deep the abyss was.
I think it can because there is a lot of atmospheric pressure so it can be crushed at one point.It would be crushed very quickly. The pressure on Venus is almost 100 times the pressure on earth. The gravity on Venus is less than the gravity on earth, however.