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Question

A boy swims a lake and initially dives 0.5m beneath the surface. When he dives 1m beneath the surface, how does the absolute pressure change?

(correct answer + 2, wrong answer - 0.50)

A
It doubles
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B
It quadruples
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C
It increases
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D
It reduces to half
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Solution

The correct option is C It increases
When he goes from 0.5 to 1m, the pressure will slightly increase. Pressure at depth 0.5m is P0+0.5dg, where P0 is atmospheric pressure, d is density The pressure change when he dives to 1m is P0+dg
So, the pressure change increases

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Q. Studies of the Weddell seal in the laboratory have described the physiological mechanisms that allow the seal to cope with the extreme oxygen deprivation that occurs during its longest dives, which can extend 500 meters below the ocean’s surface and last for over 70 minutes. Recent field studies, however, suggest that during more typical dives in the wild, this seal’s physiological behaviour is different.
In the laboratory, when the seal dives below the surface of the water and stops breathing, its heart beats more slowly, requiring less oxygen, and its arteries become constricted, ensuring that the seal’s blood remains concentrated near those organs most crucial to its ability to navigate underwater. The seal essentially shuts off the flow of blood to other organs, which either stop functioning until the seal surfaces or switch to an anaerobic (oxygen-independent) metabolism. The latter results in the production of large amounts of lactic acid, which can adversely affect the pH of the seal’s blood. Since the anaerobic metabolism occurs only in those tissues, which have been isolated from the seal’s blood supply, the lactic acid is released into the seal’s blood only after the seal surfaces, when the lungs, liver, and other organs quickly clear the acid from the seal’s bloodstream.
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