The same number as there are feet in heights. Depths is not a specific measure.
different heights and depths
Yes, upthrust, also known as buoyant force, increases as you go deeper into water because the pressure at greater depths increases due to the weight of the water above. This increased pressure causes objects to experience a greater upward force, resulting in an increase in upthrust.
Yes, you can get various depths, dependant on the manufacturer. Speak to a specialist distributor like RefitMyHome.com
Buoyant force acts upward on an object submerged in water due to the difference in pressure exerted by the water at different depths. The pressure at greater depths is higher, leading to a greater force pushing upward on the object, thus creating the buoyant force that opposes gravity. This buoyant force helps objects float or experience less weight when submerged in water.
Glass sponges generally live at water depths ranging from 1480 to 3000 ft. (450 to 900 meters).However, there is one species of glass sponge Oopsacas Minuta which has been found at much shallower depths, and there have been other glass sponge species which have been found at much deeper depths.
The deepest ROV has been down to depths of around 6Km or 3.75 miles.
The smaller, spherical shape of their pressure hulls allows for a lot more PSI at extreme depths.
It is called "upwelling" and occurs due to wind-induced surface motion, and often the Coriolis effect.
No - most military submarines are limited to crush depths above 2,000 feet.
continental slope, where the sea floor steeply drops off to deeper ocean depths. It marks the transition from shallow continental waters to the deeper oceanic realm.
Because they form in areas of compression such as within the descending slabs of crust at subduction zones. These are in turn the deepest layers within the earth where brittle deformations such as reverse faulting can occur.