As a general rule, every 10m down you go, you increase 1 atmosphere or bar. So at 1500m you'd be at 150 bar
442 psi @ 1000 feet.
you have to do the density of the water times by the weight times by the height
Depends on the depth.
Water pressure.
The pressure (force per cm2) at a particular depth is the weight of water above that square centimetre.
It depends where in the ocean you mean! To work this out: At sea level, the Earth's atmosphere exerts a pressure of 1 bar. Then each 10 meter depth of Sea Water also exerts a pressure of 1 bar. So take your ocean bottom depth (in meters) divide it by 10 and add 1. This will give you the pressure at that depth of ocean. alot
It is the weight of the water pressing down from above. The greater the depth the greater the pressure.
1440
132 feet
About 240 psi at 500 feet of depth.
Because water is denser than air.
Every 10 meters you go down, the pressure increases by approximately 1 atmosphere or 1 bar.
As wer gets deeper there is less oxygen and it gets colder.