"Regular" subs don't. The deeper you go, the greater the pressure. Eventually they'll crumble.
Submarines cannot reach the deepest parts of water because of the pressure or water and deepest surface is not a smooth, its full of rocks and sea plants.
there is too much water pressure so it will be crushed under all the weight.
January 23, 1960. The Trieste made it to the bottom of Challeger Deep which is the deepest point in all the world's oceans.
The place where the ocean floor suddenly plunges downward is called a submarine trench. These deep underwater valleys form at tectonic plate boundaries where one plate is being pushed beneath another in a process known as subduction. Submarine trenches can reach depths of over 10 kilometers and are some of the deepest parts of the ocean.
Every submarine since Drebbel's first in 1578 has been able to reach the ocean floor. Not all have been able to resurface, though.
A succession of ocean waves set in motion by a submarine earthquake is called a tsunami. Tsunamis can travel long distances across the ocean and can cause widespread destruction and flooding when they reach land.
The deepest parts of the Earth's crust can reach temperatures up to 1,600°F (870°C), due to the geothermal gradient and the heat from the Earth's interior. These high temperatures are primarily found in regions near hotspots or where there is extensive volcanic activity.
Deep ocean pressures are to great for submarines. They do not need to go deep anyway, just to avoid detection by the enemy.
The Deepsea Challenger Sub recorded the deepest dive into the Mariana's Trench. James Cameron became the first person to reach 6.8 miles down to the floor of the trench.
no, because you may believe in cartoons going deep under water. but in true life,we cant. because water can crush your body even with gears when you reach the deepest part of the ocean.
The deepest submarine, the DSV Limiting Factor, can reach depths of around 10,928 meters (35,856 feet), which is the depth of the Mariana Trench, the deepest known part of the Earth's oceans. This submersible is designed for deep-sea exploration and has successfully made multiple dives to this extreme depth. Other deep-sea submersibles, like the Trieste and the DSV Alucia, have also reached significant depths but are not as capable as the Limiting Factor in terms of operational depth.
The trench zone is the deepest part of the ocean floor, usually associated with subduction zones where tectonic plates collide. Trenches can reach depths of over 36,000 feet and are often where some of the strongest earthquakes and volcanoes occur.