Do you mean 5,000 meters of altitude or 5,000 m depth (pressure?)
At this altitude (2150-2200 ft) water will boil at about 97.8 oC . It also depends on the weather (high/low pressure).This is calculated according to 'Water Altitude Boiling Point Calculator' (Cf. 'Related links' just below this answer. Select on opened site page the 2nd button 'What is the local altitude' in ft. or m.).
The height of a water column that extends above the point of measurement affects the water pressure at that point. This height, also known as head, is commonly measured in feet or meters and represents the potential energy available to create pressure. The higher the head, the greater the water pressure.
2.31 feet of water depth exerts a presssure of one pound per square inch. A column of water 10 ft high exerts 4.33 PSI (static pressure) To prove take 4.33 times it by 2.31 = 10.00 ft
The lowest point on land not covered by liquid water is the floor of the Bentley Subglacial Trench: 2,555 m (8,383 ft) below sea level. It is however covered by a thick layer of ice.The lowest point on dry land is the shore of the Dead Sea, 418 m (1,371 ft) below sea level.The lowest point underground is a mine in South Africa, the Savuka Mine, 3,774 m (12,382 ft) deep.The lowest point on the surface (undersea) is Challenger Deep, part of the Marianas Trench in the western Pacific, with a maximum depth of 10,916 m (35,814 ft) below sea level.
16404.19 ft 1 m = 3.28 ft 1 ft = 0.3048 m
Do you mean 5,000 meters of altitude or 5,000 m depth (pressure?)
The boiling point of water at this altitude is 84,2 oC.
The pressure is only dependent on the height of water above the measuring point. 1 psi corresponds to a height of 2.3 ft, so 8 ft = 3.5 psi The pressure is only dependent on the height of water above the measuring point. 1 psi corresponds to a height of 2.3 ft, so 8 ft = 3.5 psi
Water can only be as deep as the container it is in. On earth the deepest it can be would be measured at the deepest point in the Ocean. That point is the Mariana Trench, which is almost 36,000 ft (6.8 miles) deep. However, this is not a limit of the water. Only a limit of the earth.
A fish is reeled in at a rate of 2 ft per second from a point 15 ft above water. At what rate is the angle between the line and the water changing when there is 25 ft of line out? How fast is the line moving at the surface at this time? Is this rate increasing or decreasing? thanks
3 FT 3 FT 3 FT
The distance from the hoop to the three point is19 ft but for proffesionals it is22 ft
1 cubic ft of water = 1728 cubic in of water
NBA-23 ft. NCAA-21 ft. High School-19 ft.
In general, the melting and boiling points of substances depends on the strength of the forces holding the molecules or ions together, the intermolecular bonds. For example, sodium chloride is a giant ionic crystal lattice consisting of Na+ and Cl- ions. This structure is very strong due to the attractive forces between the ions, so a lot of energy is required to break the ionic bonds and melt NaCl, hence the melting/boiling point being very high. Conversely, a molecule like methane (CH4) has very little localised charge, it is not polar, and it is a small molecule so the attractive forces between molecules are weak and methane has a low melting and boiling point.
The Highest Point: Mt. Arvon, 1980 ft. The Lowest Point: Lake Erie, 571 ft.