Answers
- Decompression Sickness: The primary cause is the formation of gas bubbles in the body due to a rapid decrease in pressure, typically caused by ascending too quickly.
- Rescue Techniques: The first step is to establish buoyancy to prevent both the rescuer and the victim from sinking.
- Physics of Diving: Increasing depth causes a loss of color, starting with red, then orange, and so on through the spectrum.
- Dive Planning: They are used to track nitrogen absorption and release in a diver’s body, helping to manage the risk of decompression sickness.
- Scuba Equipment: Inflation/deflation mechanism for buoyancy control and overpressure relief valves for safety.
- Environment and Ecosystem: Coral reefs provide habitat for a large variety of marine life and help in protecting coastlines from erosion.
- Dive Skills: The diver without air signals for help, shares the buddy’s alternate air source, and both divers maintain close contact and ascend slowly while breathing alternately.
- Teaching Methods: The PADI system includes knowledge development, confined water training, and open water training with a focus on performance-based learning.
- Dive Safety: Ear barotrauma is the most common injury, preventable by equalizing ear pressure frequently during descent.
- Navigation Skills: Using a compass for straight-line navigation and natural navigation, which involves using underwater landmarks and topography.
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