A hole in the water in which you pour money into.
A vessel on the sea often refers to a ship or boat on the ocean. By definition a vessel is a craft designed for water transportation
There is no precise size a vessel has to be for it to be called a ship.Generally it is a commercial vessel that carries cargo or passengers.An older definition was 'a ship is a commercial vessel that floats on water with at least one continuous watertight deck and is capable of carrying a boat.'
A metallic vessel, with a wide mouth, often without a cover, used for heating and boiling water or other liguids.
Which water are you speaking of? The water in a vessel, I presume? heat can go into the water, the vessel/container, the air around the vessel, and the structure holding the vessel, and the structures in the vicinity
Vessel,s are that is water vessels
When heating the vessel filled with water, the heat from the water can cause the vessel to expand. If the vessel is filled completely with water, there may not be enough space for the water to expand within the vessel, leading to the water spilling out. The spilled water mixes with the wine, causing the spill to be a mix of both water and wine.
A submarine is a vessel that can travel both on the surface and under the water.
When water freezes in an enclosed vessel, it expands and exerts pressure on the vessel walls. This pressure depends on factors such as the volume of water, rate of freezing, and strength of the vessel. Generally, this can lead to the vessel cracking or bursting if the pressure becomes too high.
I'm afraid I don't have the exact definition in front of me, but deck edge immersion is roughly the point at which a vessel has rolled or listed to a certain degree where there is not a sufficient amount of righting arm, or opposing force to right the vessel, and water passes the deck edge (main deck) and the vessel continues to roll and capsize.
An ironclad is a wooden-hulled water-going vessel which is covered in whole or in part by iron, serving as armor. Since the hull is clad in iron, it was called an ironclad ship.
The downward pressure of water at the bottom of a vessel is determined solely by the height of the water column above it and the density of the water, as described by the hydrostatic pressure equation: ( P = \rho g h ). This means that regardless of the vessel's shape, the pressure at the bottom depends only on how deep the water is, not on the vessel's width or contour. Therefore, as long as the height of the water remains constant, the pressure at the bottom will also remain constant, independent of the vessel's shape.
Arrival draft means the deepness of the vessel under water when the cargo is loaded in the vessel, and departure draft means the deepness of the vessel under water after the cargo is discharged fully or partially.