Pressure = force / area.
But:
force = mass * acceleration due to gravity.
>
Force:
Say 1 kilogram mass at earth gravitational acceleration (9.8 (m/s)/s)
= 1 * 9.8 = 9.8 newtons
>
Say area it acts on = 0.01 square metres
>
Pressure = 9.8 / 0.01 = 980 pascals (0.142 psi)
The time required to get water to boil depends upon the water initial temperature, the water mass, the nature of the heat source, the net heat transfer rate to the water, and the local barometric pressure.
Well, the pressure that's put on you if you need to finish work until a given date surely depends on time. The less time, the more pressure is put on you. If you refer to atmospheric or hydraulic pressure .... no.
Well, let's see . . .[ pressure ] x [ mass / time ] = [ force / area ] x [ mass / time ] = [ force ] x [ mass / area-time ][ Energy ] = [ force ] x [ distance ]There's no way that [ mass / area-time ] is equal to [ distance ],so the answer is pretty clearly 'no' .
The density of a material depends on the mass and the volume of that material. In order to find the density of a material you must multiple the mass of the material and the volume of the material.
no, it depends on pressure and temperature as well
Depends on the atomic mass of the molecule, the pressure, and the temperature
It depends on the pressure, but at one atmosphere it is 0.999 972 kilograms.
it really depends what time of fruit is it and their mass
Mass = Pressure*Area
Pressure=mass/unit area
There is no official time for Mass to be on Sundays. It depends on your local church.
You cannot. The amount (mass) of nitrogen in a given volume depends on its pressure and temperature.