Bar is a unit used to measure pressure, one bar is the normal atmospheric pressure of the on the surface of the earth, and ten bar is when the pressure is ten times the normal atmospheric pressure on the surface of the earth.
5.9E5 or 5.9 x 105 Pa = 5.9 bar
If you mean in the ocean, approximately every 10 meters pressure increases by 1 bar. Assuming you want absolute pressure, at the surface you already have a pressure of approximately 1 bar - the atmospheric pressure. You can base your calculations on that.
90 meters. Every 10 meters, the pressure increases by approximately 1 bar, to this, you have to add the atmospheric pressure, which is also approximate 1 bar.
It's a unit of pressure. 1 bar = 14psi (pounds per square inch). Every 6 feet underwater you go, The pressure increases by 1 bar. Therefore - if your watch has (for example) 2 bar written on it, it's capable of taking the water pressure at a depth of 12 feet.
1 bar = 105 Pascals (Pa)
The pressure at standard temperature and pressure (STP) is 1 bar.
Pressure is the physical quantity measured in bar.
Bar is a unit used to measure pressure, one bar is the normal atmospheric pressure of the on the surface of the earth, and ten bar is when the pressure is ten times the normal atmospheric pressure on the surface of the earth.
Believe it or not, we can die from too little oxygen AND too much oxygen. This concept involves partial pressures. If we first consider using standard air (i.e. 20% Oxygen and 80% Nitrogen): (1 bar = 1 kilogram of pressure per square centimetre) At the surface - Total Pressure of air = 1 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 0.2 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 0.8 bar At 10m - Total Pressure of air = 2 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 0.4 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 1.6 bar At 20m - Total Pressure of air = 3 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 0.6 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 2.4 bar At 30m - Total Pressure of air = 4 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 0.8 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 3.2 bar At 40m - Total Pressure of air = 5 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 1.0 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 4.0 bar At 50m - Total Pressure of air = 6 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 1.2 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 4.8 bar At 60m - Total Pressure of air = 7 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 1.4 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 5.6 bar At 70m - Total Pressure of air = 8 bar - Pressure of Oxygen = 1.6 bar - Pressure of Nitrogen = 6.4 bar It is at the partial pressure of 1.6 bar (which occurs at 70m where oxygen becomes toxic. That is why most dive organisations recommend 50m as a maximum for recreational diving. However, if pure oxygen is used: At surface - Pressure of Oxygen = 1 bar At 10m - Pressure of oxygen = 2 bar The oxygen has already become toxic! Hope that answers your question. The concept is called "partial pressures" and "oxygen toxicity" if you want to research more on a search engine.
The vapor pressure of water at 105 degrees Celsius is approximately 101.3 kilopascals (kPa).
16.2 bar = 1,620 kPa
bar is unit of pressure
The prefix "bar" typically denotes pressure-related units derived from the cgs system, such as bar (pressure) or bar (stress). It is often used in scientific and engineering contexts to quantify pressure or stress levels.
5.9E5 or 5.9 x 105 Pa = 5.9 bar
10 m depth is 2 bar pressure.
The boilers which produces steam of pressure 80 bar or more than 80 bar are called high pressure boilers.