No, pressure is force per unit area. In SI units, the unit of pressure is the pascal, which is equal to newton per square meter.
Pressure is defined as force per unit area, not per unit mass. It is the force applied perpendicular to a surface divided by the area over which the force is distributed. Mathematically, pressure is given by the formula P = F/A, where P is pressure, F is force, and A is area.
Pressure is the force measured over an area
pressure is not a force but pressure is a force applied in per unit of area
Pressure is not a force. Pressure is force per unit area over which it is applied.
The amount of force exerted per unit area is known as pressure. It is calculated by dividing the force applied on an object by the area over which the force is distributed. Pressure is commonly measured in units such as Pascals (Pa) or pounds per square inch (psi).
The force produced by a pressure difference can be calculated using the formula F = A * P, where F is the force, A is the area over which the pressure is acting, and P is the pressure difference. The SI unit for pressure is Pascal (Pa) and the unit for force is Newton (N).
Pressure is defined as force per unit area.
Pressure (Pa) is force per area (N/m^2). Force is (Mass*Length)/Time^2, so force per area is Mass/(Length*Time^2).
If you mean "per unit area", that is the pressure.
No. A Newton is a unit of force, while pressure is force per unit area. The standard unit of pressure is a Pascal, which is also a derived SI unit.
No. A Newton is a unit of force, while pressure is force per unit area. The standard unit of pressure is a Pascal, which is also a derived SI unit.
Gravitation can be expressed as either an acceleration or a force per unit mass.[Acceleration] = [Length/Time2][Force per unit mass] = [mass-length/Time2] per [mass] = [length/time2]