help please Current Attempt in Progress A bubble of air escaping from a diver's mask rises from a depth of 155 ft to the surface where the pressure is 1.00 atm. Initially, the bubble has a volume of...


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help please<br>Current Attempt in Progress<br>A bubble of air escaping from a diver's mask rises from a depth of 155 ft to the surface where the pressure is 1.00 atm. Initially, the<br>bubble has a volume of 10.0 mL. Assuming none of the air dissolves in the water, how many times larger is the bubble just as it reaches<br>the surface?<br>Use this data:<br>1. The density of seawater is approximately 1.025 g mL<br>2. The density of mercury is 13.6g ml1<br>I times larger<br>Use your answer to explain why scuba divers constantly exhale as they slowly rise from a deep dive.<br>Since the pressure increases by a factor of approximately<br>the volume must<br>decrease<br>by a<br>factor of approximately<br>Divers exhale to decreases the amount of gas in their lungs, so it does not expand<br>to a volume smaller than the<br>diver's lungs.<br>

Extracted text: help please Current Attempt in Progress A bubble of air escaping from a diver's mask rises from a depth of 155 ft to the surface where the pressure is 1.00 atm. Initially, the bubble has a volume of 10.0 mL. Assuming none of the air dissolves in the water, how many times larger is the bubble just as it reaches the surface? Use this data: 1. The density of seawater is approximately 1.025 g mL 2. The density of mercury is 13.6g ml1 I times larger Use your answer to explain why scuba divers constantly exhale as they slowly rise from a deep dive. Since the pressure increases by a factor of approximately the volume must decrease by a factor of approximately Divers exhale to decreases the amount of gas in their lungs, so it does not expand to a volume smaller than the diver's lungs.

Jun 11, 2022
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