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If 30 N of force is exerted over an area of 20 m2 1.5 pascals of pressure is being applied.
500P
If 30 N of force is exerted over an area of 20 m2 1.5 pascals of pressure is being applied.
A.2800 Pa b.6400 Pa c.17,500Pa
What type of airplane, how much does it weigh, and how fast is it traveling. Is it flying level to the horizon, or is it increasing/decreasing elevation. You have to take in to account these factors before you can answer that question.
Water is denser than air so the pressure is much greater underwater than it is in the air. Ascending 20 meters (50ish feet)underwater is about the same amount of pressure as like 1000 feet in the air
1013 mb
5 Million Newtons was the pressure exerted by Saturn v rocket
14.7lbs/sq. inch
If 30 N of force is exerted over an area of 20 m2 1.5 pascals of pressure is being applied.
500P
If 30 N of force is exerted over an area of 20 m2 1.5 pascals of pressure is being applied.
Pressure is the weight of an overlying column of material. The pressure at the core comes from 6400km of overlying rock, which is much denser than air
Pressure is the weight of an overlying column of material. The pressure at the core comes from 6400km of overlying rock, which is much denser than air
500p kyrus cook alt school a+ls
500p kyrus cook alt school a+ls
Okay well... Let's see... ~ At 102 feet the diver is experiencing 3 atmospheres of pressure. ~ The diver is able endure that pressure without being squashed simply because the human body always tries to maintain an equilibrium as in homeostasis. Boyle's gass law tells us that as pressure increases volume decreases, so anywhere that there is gas (or air) will decrease in volume, which in closing will help us maintain the extra pressure ~ 《Sorry, I tried to simplify that as much as I could but it's a little difficult (≧∇≦)》