At 5,500 feet down, the pressure on the vessel would be 2,458.71 pounds per square inch.
The water pressure depends only on the depth, not on the size or shape of the vessel. The pressure increases at about 1 atmosphere (or bar) every 10 meters.
approximately 0.8 bar
Water pressure increases as depth increases.
as water depth increases then so does the water pressure
The depth of water is directly related to the pressure caused by it. It is caused by gravitational force on the amount of water column in the depth.
At 300 feet of water depth the pressure is about 130 psi
Yes, pressure does increase as your depth increases in the water
you have to do the density of the water times by the weight times by the height
The pressure at the same depth in any container doesn't depend on the size of the container. The pressure one meter below the surface is the same in a pond, a lake, a swimming pool, the middle of the Pacific Ocean, or a bath-tub.
More depth equals more pressure, thus why ears pop when diving in water.
Water pressure = height (depth) * density of substance * gravitational field strength
At very low depths, water pressure becomes exceedingly high. If a submarine submerges below it's depth tolerance, the water pressure outside will exceed the limits of the pressure hull which maintains a normal air pressure for the crew. This will collapse the hull. This is referred to an implosion because the destruction comes from the outside in a crushing manner.