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Much of the earth is still being explored. The deep jungle for instance is very difficult to get to, and modern technology does not help much because to use it we would have to destroy much of the jungle. The deep ocean is another example. Only one expedition has put man in the deepest depths of the ocean while we have been putting men in space for years. The creatures in the deepest depths of the ocean are almost completely unknown to us because of this. The reason the depths of the ocean are so difficult to explore is because of water. For every 33 feet you descend below the surface of water, you double the pressure. 1 atmosphere is the normal atmospheric pressure at sea level. in space we experience 0 atmospheric pressure. The challenger deep, the deepest known location in the ocean, you are almost 7 miles under water, or about 36,000 feet, which leaves the pressure of all the water over you at 1,086 bars, or 1,086 times atmospheric pressure.
The surface pressure on Venus is 90 times that of Earth. Imagine being one kilometer under the ocean.
The pressure at the bottom of the ocean can be determined by the formula P = dgh, where d = 1025 kg per cubic meter, g is the acceleration due to gravity and h is the depth of the water in meters. At the bottom of the Marianas Trench (11034 meters), the pressure would be 1.11 E5 kPa, or 1095 times normal air pressure at sea level.
Pressure= Force/Area Pressure of a Liquid is density times gravity times height
No. The gravity on Venus would be slightly less than on Earth, about 90% of Earth's.The difference is a much greater atmospheric pressure, which on the surface of Venus is about 92 times the sea-level pressure on Earth. As we see with deep underwater conditions on Earth, this pressure could crush an unreinforced structure with a lower pressure inside. The pressure from Venus's carbon dioxide atmosphere is about the same as the ocean pressure at a depth of 1 kilometer on Earth.
It is a lot more pressure than what you are used to. This is why extra precautions and gear is needed.
true
The water pressure in the hadal zone, which is the deepest part of the ocean, can reach extreme levels of over 1,000 times atmospheric pressure at the surface. This is due to the weight of the water column above.
Much of the earth is still being explored. The deep jungle for instance is very difficult to get to, and modern technology does not help much because to use it we would have to destroy much of the jungle. The deep ocean is another example. Only one expedition has put man in the deepest depths of the ocean while we have been putting men in space for years. The creatures in the deepest depths of the ocean are almost completely unknown to us because of this. The reason the depths of the ocean are so difficult to explore is because of water. For every 33 feet you descend below the surface of water, you double the pressure. 1 atmosphere is the normal atmospheric pressure at sea level. in space we experience 0 atmospheric pressure. The challenger deep, the deepest known location in the ocean, you are almost 7 miles under water, or about 36,000 feet, which leaves the pressure of all the water over you at 1,086 bars, or 1,086 times atmospheric pressure.
The deepest point of the ocean is in the "Marianas Trench" and it's called "Challenger Deep" wich is almost 11000 meters deep, the pressure here is literally 1000 times stronger than the normal pressure at sea level, so it would feel like nothing, because u would be almost instantly crushed :)
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Unfortunately at the moment no. More people have been in space and have walked on the Moon, then have been to the deepest parts of the Oceans. Why is this you ask, the answer is very simple, Pressure, the deep you go in the ocean the high the pressure gets. In the deepest parts of the Ocean, the pressure down there is a staggering 15,966 pounds (7.24 metric tonnes) per square inch, or roughly 1,086 times the pressure we live with at sea level. The Temperature down there is 27°F (-3°C), it is kept liquid by the amount of pressure from all the water above. You have to have specially made submersibles to get down that deep, and at the moment there are only robotic craft that can go that deep.
if the ice seas are liquid, the waters on Uranus could be 2000 times deeper then the deepest sea or ocean on earth.
We will experience a pressure 2.7 times atmospheric pressure.
The surface pressure on Venus is 90 times that of Earth. Imagine being one kilometer under the ocean.
Would we call it air pressure, more likely to be water pressure.The pressure down there is a staggering 15,966 pounds (7.24 metric tonnes) per square inch, or roughly 1,086 times the pressure we live with at sea level. The Temperature down there is 27°F (-3°C), it is kept liquid by the amount of pressure from all the water above.