The
Descent

A field guide to scuba diving — the gear that keeps you breathing, the physics that keeps you honest, the training that keeps you alive, and the hazards that demand respect. Scroll to descend.

Begin descent — 0 m
Station 1 · 0–40 m

The Physics

Every rule in diving is downstream of three gas laws. Water is ~800× denser than air: every 10 m of seawater adds one full atmosphere of pressure. Your body, your air, and your dive computer are all negotiating with that fact.

Depth simulator

drag to dive · 0–40 m recreational range
0 m
Depth
1.0 ATA
Absolute pressure
100%
Air volume (Boyle)
1.0×
Air consumption
No-deco limit (air)*
0.21
ppO₂ (air)
A balloon filled at the surface. At 30 m it holds 100% of its volume — squeeze it down, and on ascent it expands right back. This is why you never hold your breath.
RED
ORG
YEL
GRN
BLU
Color absorption — water eats the spectrum from red to blue. By 5 m red is gone; that "gray" fish is crimson under a torch.

*Approximate single-dive no-decompression limits on air, for illustration only. Always plan with your computer and tables.

Boyle's Law

P₁V₁ = P₂V₂

Gas volume is inversely proportional to pressure. Governs equalization, buoyancy changes, lung overexpansion injuries, and why your BCD needs constant adjustment. The biggest proportional volume changes happen in the last 10 m near the surface.

Dalton's Law

Ptotal = ppO₂ + ppN₂ + …

Total pressure is the sum of each gas's partial pressure. At depth, the partial pressure of every gas you breathe multiplies — which is why oxygen becomes toxic deep, and why nitrox has depth limits.

Henry's Law

Gas dissolved ∝ pressure

Gas dissolves into liquids in proportion to its partial pressure. Your tissues quietly load nitrogen the whole dive. Ascend too fast and it comes back out as bubbles — the mechanism behind decompression sickness.

Archimedes' Principle

Buoyancy = weight of displaced water

The foundation of neutral buoyancy — the defining skill of a good diver. Salt water is denser than fresh, so you need more weight in the ocean. Wetsuit compression at depth steals buoyancy, which your BCD gives back.

Station 2 · Life support

The Equipment

Scuba gear is a redundant life-support system you wear. Tap any item to expand it.

Station 3 · Certification

Training Agencies

Certification cards ("C-cards") are issued by agencies, not governments, and are recognized worldwide. The instructor matters more than the logo — but each agency has a distinct culture. The typical path: Open Water → Advanced → Rescue → Divemaster / specialty and technical tracks.

AgencyOriginKnown forCharacter
PADIProfessional Association of Diving InstructorsUSA, 1966The world's largest agency; certifies the majority of new diversHighly standardized, modular courses; available almost anywhere on Earth
SSIScuba Schools InternationalUSA, 1970Digital-first training, dive-center-centric modelFlexible structure; free digital materials; strong global footprint
NAUINational Association of Underwater InstructorsUSA, 1960One of the oldest agencies; trains NASA's NBL diversInstructor latitude; reputation for academic depth
CMASConfédération Mondiale des Activités SubaquatiquesFrance, 1959Co-founded by Jacques Cousteau; star system (1★/2★/3★)Federation-based; strong in Europe and Latin America
BSACBritish Sub-Aqua ClubUK, 1953Club-based diving; the UK's national governing bodyThorough training tuned for cold, low-visibility water
GUEGlobal Underwater ExplorersUSA, 1998"Doing It Right" standardized gear and team protocolsDemanding standards; cave and exploration pedigree
TDI / SDITechnical / Scuba Diving InternationalUSA, 1994TDI is the largest technical-diving agencyPragmatic; SDI handles recreational, TDI handles trimix, deco, rebreathers
RAIDRebreather Association of International Divers2007Born around rebreathers, now full recreational rangeFully online academics; emphasis on neutral-buoyancy skills
Station 4 · Ways to dive

Modalities

Same ocean, very different dives. Each modality layers new skills, equipment, and risk management onto the basics.

Station 5 · Respect the water

The Dangers

Diving is statistically safe — comparable to driving — because divers train for these specific failure modes. Almost every one is preventable. Expand each hazard for the mechanism and the countermeasure.