100 meters
10 meters of water depth equals about 1 atmosphere.
Pressure increases by one atmosphere for every 10 meters of depth.
Because water is denser than air.
You will encounter a pressure of 2 atmospheres in the ocean at a depth of approximately 20 meters (about 66 feet). This is due to the fact that pressure increases by about 1 atmosphere for every 10 meters of water depth. Therefore, at 20 meters, the pressure from the water column adds an additional atmosphere to the 1 atmosphere of pressure at sea level, resulting in a total of 2 atmospheres.
The pressure at a depth of 10 meters underwater is about 2 atmospheres, which is equivalent to around 1 atmosphere of pressure at the surface plus an additional atmosphere for every 10 meters of depth. This increased pressure is due to the weight of the water above pushing down on you.
One atmosphere of pressure is equal to the pressure at sea level. Therefore, 100 atmospheres would be roughly equivalent to the pressure experienced at a depth of about 3,000 feet (914 meters) underwater.
At 30 meters depth in salt water, a diver will experience a pressure of approximately 4 atmospheres or 4 times the pressure at the surface. This is because water exerts 1 atmosphere of pressure for every 10 meters of depth.
For each 33 feet of depth in water the pressure increases approximately 1 atmosphere. So 100 meters is approximately 330 ft divide by 33 equals 10 atmosphere.
The Indian Ocean's depth is 3,890 meters.
Every 10 meters you go down, the pressure increases by approximately 1 atmosphere or 1 bar.
One Bar is 10.2 Meters of fresh water or 9.0 meters of saltwater. it is 204 meters for fresh water. and 180 meters in salt water. :-)
Every 10 meters you go down, the pressure increases by approximately 1 atmosphere or 1 bar.