Every 10 metres, the pressure increases by one atmosphere, so, at 10 metres, total two atmospheres, it would double, to 50 litres per minute. Ten more metres, total three atmospheres, three times surface, or, 75 litres per minute Fresh and salt have the same pressure, the only two real differences are buoyancy; salt is more buoyant, and then...there's taste psi is an old measure of pressure, not volume
It seems you know the answer, but it is 75 psi.
75 psi/minute
50
75 psi/minute
90 psi
75 psi/minute
In any given sample of seawater, you will probably find all 90 elements, but some of them are going to be in extremely minute quantities.
no
80 feet per minute is 2,438.4 cm per minute.
It depends you the divers lung capacity and how many breathsper minute they take. But in general it would be 1.3 to 1.8.
Think about the question for a minute.... Lots of water, millions of volts of electricity and a large metal tank on your back which is a fine conductor of said electricity. Do the math.
A friend of mine suggested me to dip the veggies in salt water for 3 minutes. I did it the next time I bought cabbage, and guess what IT WORKS! After a minute or so, the worms (2 big ones) were floating dead on the surface. I rinsed my cabbage thoroughly n finally they were completely safe for consumption..
A palpocil is a minute soft filamentary process springing from the surface of certain hydroids and sponges.
The atmosphere of Venus is not breathable by any life form that we know of. Our probes survive less than a minute on the surface.
Saturn rotates quickly, once in 10.2 hours, so in one minute it would rotate through 0.59 degrees. At the equator of Saturn's visible surface that would be about 600 kilometres per minute.