Cruises??? |
| I have decided to take my girls, 14 yrs and 5 yrs on a cruise. Want it to be a great Mom and Daughter experience for the 3 of us. I need some ideas as I have never been on a cruise before. I live in H... |
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How many times have you been on cruises? |
Questions:
1. How many times have you been on cruises?
(tell what ship and where to, please?)
Thanks!
I'll tell you about my cruise experiences (lol)
1. Norwegian D... |
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How to do you get the best cruise deals? What is the best time of the year to cruise? |
I am trying whether to take my kids or not, it the airline prices that is going to kill us. Additional Details Also what's the quickest and cheapest way to get a passport? What ... |
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What is the best cruise for two 18 year olds? |
| My friend and I are 18 and looking into cruises for the summer before college. We are looking for both fun and relaxation. We are looking more for the Caribbean cruise and whatnot, and would like ... |
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How do you get the best deal on a cruise? |
| (Where should I buy it? What should I ask for?) ETC... |
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What is your favorite cruise line and why? |
| Please no jokes about Tom Cruise please. It was funny but its been done.... |
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How loud can you be (wink wink) in your cruise ship room before you get heard? |
| We are going on a western carribean cruise for our honeymoon, and she's a screamer.... |
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Cruises, ARE THEY SCARY?? |
has anyone been on a cruise and if so WAS IT SCARY? im going on a cruise but im kind of scared. what if the boat sinks?? HELP! Additional Details thanks to all those that have been ... |
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Have you been on a wonderful cruise? |
| I have been on several cruises, however there are some that i would not repeat. I would like to know about your most enjoyable cruise experince. Like what was the name of the boat and what cruise ... |
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Are cruises all inclusive? What kind kind of surprise charges can I expect to be hit with.? |
Additional Details Seems like a bad deal. You are forced to tip every one on the boat. Drinks cost a fortune, even bottled water is high priced!... |
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My husband and I would like to take a cruise? |
| But I am not all that well traveled so I am confused on how to go about it. When you buy your tickets, is it all inclusive (food, drinks)? Do you have to pay extra for the onboard or offboard ... |
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When taking a cruise with a family of 4, is it better to have the early dining or late dining? |
| Also, is it better to sit at a table with just the four of us or should we sit at a larger table? The kids ages are 12 and 9. We have never cruised before and are about to take a Royal Caribbean E... |
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Best Cruise TIPS? |
| what was some of the things u wish you knew before going on a cruise?... |
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Going on a cruise to the Bahamas tomorrow . I'm excited but the rest of my family isn't!! What should i do? |
They are really bringing my mood down!!! Additional Details They are really bringing my mood dowm. ( they are going on the cruise with me)... |
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Cruise: what color formal dress is approriate? |
| Im going on a cruise in April, I have never been before. I heard someone comment once while looking at cruise photos that it was inapproriate to wear red to a formal dinner on a cruise. Is this true? ... |
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gordontovey |
How does a iron ship float? |
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wild_eep
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Ask Archimedes.
OK take an object, any object. Ask two questions:
(1) how heavy is it?
(2) how much space does it take up?
Now figure out how much water would take up the same space that your object would take up. How heavy is that water? is it heavier than your object? then your object floats. No? then it sinks.
So your iron ship is just a big box full of air. Sure, it's heavy, but it's nowhere near as heavy as a bunch of water that takes up the same space. Water, by the way, is more or less the heaviest liquid we have available in normal conditions, apart from mercury.
What actually made Archimedes run into the street naked was the realisation that your object will sink down UNTIL it has shoved out of the way an amount of water that is exactly as heavy as it is. That's why when you load a ship up with containers/coal/passengers, it sits lower in the water than when it's empty. |
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Sossage
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The hollowness of the ship means that the effective density of the ship as a whole is less than water, and so the boat floats. |
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Phil Knight
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Displacement... a little principle, but it keeps those heavy ships afloat. |
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maya
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Because the volume of air contained within the ship is less dense than the water surrounding it. Therefore its lighter than the water.. |
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Frodette Baggins
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Heh! Archimedes had the answer you know. He jumped out of the bath and ran down the street naked yelling 'Eureka' apparently - or something like that! All to do with 'displacement.' |
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bananabex
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coz its hollow and full of air |
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k²
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A ship is less dense than water. In other words, x cubic metres of the ship weighs less that the same x cubic metres of water.
When something is less dense than the matter around it, it floats. This is also why hot air balloons float (hot air is less dense than cool air), icebergs float (ice is less dense than water) and submarines don't just sink to the seabed (again, the submarine is less dense than water - it uses ballasts that fill up with water to adjust its overall density to control the depth at which it floats). Conversely, it's also why rocks sink in water (rocks are denser than water). |
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cherry♥blossoms
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something called physices. duh! u might as well b asking how does a icecube float in water. |
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eflatsharp
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Oh sweetie, if you don't know. why did you waste your time writing it (I know - 2 points) and more importantly, OUR time having to read it until we get to a proper answer or two |
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Trevor
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It's all to do with the mass (weight) of the ship.
Before something can sink in water it has to have so much weight that it's able to push the water out of the way.
Water weights one ton per cubic metre so if an object is placed in water that weighs less than one ton per cubic metre it will float, if it weighs more than one ton per cubic metre it will sink.
The ship may be made of iron but it's not a solid lump of iron and so the overall weight of the ship is less than one ton per cubic metre. Iron itself will sink because it's very heavy but the ship is hollow and has a lot of air in it.
As people and cargo board the ship the overall weight increases and the ship will sit a little lower in the water. If more and more people and cargo board the ship there would eventually come a point when the ship would sink.
Let's imagine that the ship weighs 1000 tons, when placed in the water it will displace (push aside) 1000 tons / 1000 cubic meters of water - this is what's known as displacement and is a standard way of 'weighing' a ship.
Now lets imaging that the people and cargo that are loaded onto the ship weigh 200 tons. By loading them on board another 200 tons / 200 cubic metres of water will be displaced.
Now, let's assume that the ship has a volume of 2000 cubic metres. When it's empty and placed in the water it will displace 1000 cubic metres of water (because it weights 1000 tons). At this point 1000 cubic metres of the ship will be below the water and 1000 cubic metres will be above it.
As the ship is loaded with 200 tons of cargo and people it displaces 200 cubic metres more water and now has a total weight of 1200 tons. There will now be 1200 cubic metres of the ship below the water and 800 cubic metres above the water.
This is in simple terms and there's a bit more to it - eg the density of sea water isn't the same as pure water, but in essence this is how it works. |
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me
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In the same manner that a pie pan will float in your kitchen sink. The iron ship is actually less dense than the water it displaces. If the hull is breached, and large volumes of water enter, the physics of the ship have changed, and it will not float. |
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Chris
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maybe you missed the news about the titanic. it doesn't. |
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Sweetie
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don't have a clue, sorry |
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Tom C
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It has bulk heads full of air, plus although it is iron, the weight is spread evenly, and cause it so big, it might as well be tin foil from a large scale |
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