It propels it forward in the water.
No. A submarine's propeller relies on the water around it for something to push against. As space is a vacuum, the propeller would have nothing to push against, ergo the submarine would have no thrust.
When a submarine is traveling at a constant depth, the primary forces acting on it are buoyancy, gravity, drag (or hydrodynamic resistance), and thrust. The buoyant force, which acts upward, is equal to the weight of the water displaced by the submarine, while gravity pulls the submarine downward. For the submarine to maintain a constant depth, these forces must be balanced, meaning the buoyant force equals the gravitational force. Additionally, the thrust generated by the submarine's engines must counteract the drag force to maintain a steady speed.
A submarine can stop due to a combination of factors, including the application of reverse thrust from its propellers, drag forces from the water, and the use of ballast tanks to adjust buoyancy and control descent. By carefully managing these factors, a submarine can come to a controlled stop in the water.
A German Submarine sunk a U.S. ship carrying weapons to Britain. Dont know the exact date though.
Thrust it a force that is sent out from a object through its own propulsion. E.G. a jet engine creates thrust and pushes a aeroplane along. Pressure is a force that is put on a object. E.G. when a submarine dives the water pushes in on it, This is Pressure.
Thrust Capacity is how much thrust it can take :D
Jaw-Thrust Technique
Thrusted is the past tense and past participle of thrust.
Modern submarines move by using some sort of motor to drive a propellor (called a screw). The big u-boats have nuclear reactors that heat water to make steam, and have steam turbines that drive the screw through a big reduction gear. There are many smaller submarines that use a battery bank and electric motors with little propellors on them to move around.
The angle at which you thrust.
The past tense of "thrust" is "thrust." "Thrust" is an irregular verb, meaning it does not follow the typical rule of adding "-ed" to form the past tense. Instead, the past tense remains the same as the base form. So, you would say, "He thrust the sword into the stone."
You drag the word "submarine" itself onto the submarine. Then you wait for it to sink.