2,267 feet under and no, a person cannot dive to the Titanic; too deep
It's about 2.5 miles below the surface of the North Atlantic. That depth is far beyond where a diver can go, but specialized deep-sea submarines can visit the wreck site.
Not counting a photographic expedition in 2010, the last manned dive to the wreck of Titanic was in 2005.
The temperature of the water the night Titanic sank was around the freezing mark but that's not the case all-year round. Historian Don Lynch recounts that during a dive to the wreck, people were comfortable enough to swim on the surface.
Many things occurred as Titanic was sinking. The downward tipping was positioning her to receive more incoming water. First from the breach under the waterline but then each successive open porthole and even an open gangway door located by James Cameron in a dive to the wreck.
The towed underewater sled that photograhed Titanic for the first time was Angus. The first submersible to dive on Titanic was the Alvin, originally named for famous explorer Al Vine, but joking named for Alvin the Chipmunk due to its small size and cramped quarters.
It's about 2.5 miles below the surface of the North Atlantic. That depth is far beyond where a diver can go, but specialized deep-sea submarines can visit the wreck site.
Auguste Piccard
It depends on the percentage of the mixture You can adjust the percentage depending on desired depth and length of dive.
No because Titanic is so deep you need a submarine capable of holding off the pressure. If a person dived in and swam to the bottom, chances are that you would die.
None. The Titanic was not built to dive.
The first person to dive in a submersible to a depth of 3,150 meters was Jacques Piccard. He achieved this milestone on January 23, 1960, during the bathyscaphe Trieste's descent to the bottom of the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, alongside U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh. Their historic dive remains one of the deepest manned explorations of the ocean.
Not counting a photographic expedition in 2010, the last manned dive to the wreck of Titanic was in 2005.
The recreational dive limits for this dive site are typically a maximum depth of 60 feet and a maximum dive time of 60 minutes.
Dive depth was reliant upon the U-Boat type ; they could dive safely to approximately 50 to 75 meters . ~ Look to the related link below for additional technical information .
Yes, and it was rediscovered and photographed in a dive by James Cameron.
Any decent dive computer can withstand greater pressure than you can.
The depth of the dive and the duration of time spent at that depth are the two primary factors that influence how much nitrogen you absorb during a dive. Nitrogen absorption increases with depth due to higher pressure, and longer dive times allow for more nitrogen to be taken up by body tissues.