- #1
D9 XTC
- 30
- 0
Alright, so let's say you've got two air tanks. They both have the same capacity. So, let's say we bring the tanks down into the ocean where the atmosphere is 4x that at sea level and fill both of the air tanks to about their max capacity. (They hold 4x the air that they did at sea level because of their depth)
The difference between the tanks is that one is very sturdy and one is not.
Now, we bring both tanks to sea level and the sturdy one doesn't blow up and the other one does but only because one is much more solid than the other.
My question is does the air in both tanks expand equally even though one was solid enough to withstand the pressure changes?
The difference between the tanks is that one is very sturdy and one is not.
Now, we bring both tanks to sea level and the sturdy one doesn't blow up and the other one does but only because one is much more solid than the other.
My question is does the air in both tanks expand equally even though one was solid enough to withstand the pressure changes?