If it were possible to go super sonic under water, would there be a sonic boom?
If it were possible to go super sonic under water, would there be a sonic boom?
Before or after you leave the treadmill?
You'd have to ask DEAN KARNAZES, he's done it several times.
all a sonic boom is is the result of going faster than the speed of sound in a particular medium. so, if you accelerate to faster than the speed of sound in water, then there will be a sonic boom. the speed is different than that in air though.
is any of that correct guys?
Water is essentially incompressible, so at high speeds it does not behave the same way that air does. If you could ever make a vehicle move that fast under water, cavitation due to the low pressure region behind your vehicle would probably become a very big (and destructive) problem long before you ever approached the speed of sound in water.