Yes, when a submarine boat pumps water out of its flotation (not floatation) tanks, the submarine should rise.
A submarine alters its buoyancy to rise and fall in water by adjusting the amount of water in its ballast tanks. When the tanks are filled with water, the submarine becomes heavier and sinks; when air is pumped into the tanks, the submarine becomes lighter and rises. This process allows the submarine to control its depth in the water column effectively.
When the tanks are full of water they force O2 out of the tanks. Once the tanks empty out the water they will fill with gasses that in the water such as O2 or Co2. These gasses are palpably less dense than water so the submarine rises. I hope that helps.
Water enters the submarine by letting water out not into its ballast tanks it enters from the flagura to the magura.
The density will rise and submerge the submarine.
A submarine has a variable buoyancy due to it's ballast tanks. When a submarine submerges, it fills it's ballast tanks with water which causes negative buoyancy. When a submarine surfaces, it pumps the water out of the ballast tanks thus giving it positive buoyancy.
Filling the ballast tanks with water increases the submarine's density. This will cause it to sink into the water. Blowing out the water with air reduces it and the sub will return to the surface.
A submarine actually controls its weight by allowing water to enter or exit hollow chambers in its hull. These chambers are called ballast tanks. Ballast is anything carried in a ship to give stability. When water is allowed to flood into a submarine's ballast tanks, the weight of the submarine increases. When this increased weight exceeds the submarine's buoyancy, the submarine will sink. To allow the submarine to rise, air is pumped into the ballast tanks. The air forces out the water, reducing the weight of the submarine. The submarine then becomes lighter, buoyancy increases, and it floats to the surface. A submarine can also be made to "float" underwater at any depth by adjusting the amount of water weight in its ballast tanks.
The air tanks on a submarine are typically located in the ballast tanks, which are distributed throughout the submarine's hull. These tanks are used to adjust the submarine's buoyancy by filling or emptying them with air or water.
The density will rise and submerge the submarine.
A submarine can sink and float in water because it has ballast tanks that can be filled with water to make it sink and with air to make it float. By adjusting the amount of water and air in the ballast tanks, the submarine can control its buoyancy and stay submerged at a desired depth or rise back to the surface.
A submarine floats and sinks by adjusting its buoyancy through the use of ballast tanks. When the submarine wants to sink, it fills these tanks with water, increasing its weight and causing it to descend. To float, the submarine expels the water from the ballast tanks, replacing it with air, which decreases its weight and allows it to rise. This ability to control buoyancy enables submarines to navigate at various depths in the water.