they almost are, fluids means more than one fluid is just one
Any substance that can Flow is called a 'Fluid'. Water is a Fluid Liquid....It can Flow. Steam is a Fluid Gas...It can Flow. Therefore, Liquids and Gases are Fluids. (The Molecules of Solids are closely bonded and cannot move around and over each other. They vibrate in the same position...Solids therefore are not Fluids, they cannot flow). (Norrie wrote this not me so give credit to Norrie)
These terms are usually used in conjuction with fluid-fluid heat exchangers. In both cases, the two fluids in the exchanger are moving in parallel flowpaths with each other. In contraflow, the fluids move in opposite directions along those paths, so the two inlets are on opposite ends of the exchanger. In parallel flow, the fluids move in the same direction, so the inlets are on the same end.
Fluid mechanics is the study of the effects of forces and energy on liquids and gases. One branch of the field, hydrostatics, deals with fluids at rest; the other, fluid dynamics, deals with fluids in motion and with the motion of bodies through fluids. Liquids and gases are both treated as fluids because they often have the same equations of motion and exhibit the same flow phenomena. The subject has numerous applications in fields varying from aeronautics and marine engineering to the study of blood flow and the dynamics of swimming.
That depends what the fluid is. Not all fluids weigh same.
NO !! POWER STEERING FLUID IS SIMILAR TO TRANSMISSION FLUID... BRAKE FUILD IS LIKE NOTHING ELSE
What kind of fluid, liquid or gas? Gases are compressible, liquids pretty much are not. (And yes, both gases and liquids are fluids; the word "fluid" comes from the same root word that gives us "flow," which both gases and liquids are capable of doing.)
They are the same because they all have atoms.
Depends what the "fluid " is - Not all fluids are same weight/volume ratio
Pascal's Law states that if you apply pressure to fluids that are confined (or can't flow to anywhere), the fluids will then transmit (or send out) that same pressure in all directions at the same rate.
NO. The two fluids are not the same. Buy a can of the proper P/S fluid.
no bcoz the density and viscosity of the water and different fluids and not same
No, it is not.