A lot. Enough so that it becomes dangerous to try and stop it. One of the worst things you can do is to hold your nose and sneeze 'inward.' You generate so much force that the sneeze, I've heard somewhere, can propel mucous over 300 mph. If you try and block it, you can rupture blood vessels in your head, and even in your brain. So if you feel one coming on, let it rip and enjoy the natural and pleasurable sensation.
13 pounds with a bare fist straight on, 10 punds bare fist from the side, and if your whereing gloves it takes one or two pounds of pressure........hope this helped?
I know a human sneeze can have a force of up to 300 mph~
Yet, how many lbs of pressure are behind that sneeze?
Human sneeze has very high pressure in sneeze. Probably it should go in hundreds of pounds per square inch.
100PPSI
The weight of the atmosphere (which is about 14.5038 pounds per square inch) does not put any pressure on the human spine (the spine is not directly supporting this load form the top of you head to the ground - the pressure is all round you).
Depends on pressure.
I believe and researched on this issue. You know we always gets a new life after one sneeze. This is why our eyes closes. When we sneeze, our all organs stops working for many micro seconds and that sneeze pushes all the organs to work again in their normal positions. Because sneezing with your eyes open will make them pop out. do NOT try this.
15 lbs.
You can't really convert that. Kilogram is a unit of mass, bar is a unit of pressure; so they really measure completely different things.
A human will sneeze millions of times during their lifetime. There is no way to count exactly how many actual sneezes will occur.
125
The average is seven pounds.
The weight of the atmosphere (which is about 14.5038 pounds per square inch) does not put any pressure on the human spine (the spine is not directly supporting this load form the top of you head to the ground - the pressure is all round you).
Depending on the sharpness of the blade, the ear is easily removed with little pressure. There are no bones or other problems with removal. A child could easily remove an ear with a common steak knife.
3000 pounds of pressure they can snap a broom handle in half
You need six pounds of pressure to torque.
556 pounds
35-4500 pounds
Up to 180 pounds
10 pounds
The average human head weighs around 8-10 pounds