0% found this document useful (0 votes)
271 views1 page

Under Pressure Entry

This document provides information about scuba diving safety and the effects of water pressure at different depths. It discusses how water pressure increases with depth and how this affects the volume of air in a diver's lungs. The document asks you to create a brochure and lesson plan addressing questions about how lung volume varies with depth and pressure according to Boyle's law, how divers must exhale air as they ascend to prevent lung damage, and how the duration of air in a scuba tank is inversely proportional to pressure at depth.

Uploaded by

api-264258719
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
271 views1 page

Under Pressure Entry

This document provides information about scuba diving safety and the effects of water pressure at different depths. It discusses how water pressure increases with depth and how this affects the volume of air in a diver's lungs. The document asks you to create a brochure and lesson plan addressing questions about how lung volume varies with depth and pressure according to Boyle's law, how divers must exhale air as they ascend to prevent lung damage, and how the duration of air in a scuba tank is inversely proportional to pressure at depth.

Uploaded by

api-264258719
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

Lets Go Diving!

Scuba diving helps marine scientists explore the underwater frontier. It is also a popular sport. But to dive
safely, divers must understand that water pressure at depths of even 30 or 40 feet can be very dangerous.
Modern scuba-diving equipment allows divers to stay under water for long periods of time. But the depth and
length of dives are limited by the amount of pressure that the human body can tolerate.
Your job is to write a brochure to hand out to people who are just learning to dive. Your brochure should
include basic scuba safety and all the information they need to know about how pressure will affect their
dive. You will also plan a lesson for a beginning scuba class about how to deal with pressure when you dive.
All of the following questions need to be addressed in both your brochure and your lesson.
1) Scuba divers must learn about pressure under water. At the water's surface, air exerts 1 atmosphere
(atm) of pressure. Under water, the pressure increases. The pressure P (atm) varies with depth d (ft)
according to the equation P = + 1. Boyle's law states that the volume V of air varies inversely with
the pressure P. If you hold your breath, the volume of air in your lungs increases as you ascend. If you
have 4 qt of air in your lungs at a depth of 66 ft (P = 3 atm), the air will expand to 6 qt when you reach
33 ft, where P = 2 atm.

Using the data in the example above, make a table and graph to show how the volume of air in your
lungs varies with depth.
Make a table and graph to show how the volume of air in your lungs varies with pressure.

2) You found that the volume of air in a diver's lungs could more than double as the diver resurfaces. This
expansion can cause the membranes of the lungs to rupture. Divers must learn to exhale properly
while ascending.

If you fill your lungs with 4 qt of air at a depth of 66 ft, how many quarts of air will you need to exhale
during your ascent to still have 4 qt of air in your lungs when you reach the surface?

3) The rate at which a scuba diver uses air in the tank depends on many factors, such as the diver's age
and lung capacity. Another important factor is the depth of the dive. A scuba diver continues to
breathe normally while descending. Every time the diver inhales, the tank delivers enough air to inflate
the diver's lungs. This means that the amount of air delivered by the tank must increase with the depth
in order to withstand the increasing pressure. At greater depths, the diver uses the air in the tank more
quickly. The amount of time the air will last is inversely proportional to the pressure at the depth of the
dive.

Suppose a tank has enough air to last 60 min at the surface. How long will it last at a depth of 99 ft?
(The pressure is 4 atm, or 4 times as great.)
Make a table showing how long the air will last at 0 ft, 20 ft, 33 ft, 40 ft, 50 ft, 66 ft, and 99 ft.

You might also like