It can't be made compressible, if that's what you mean - unless you turn it into steam.There really is no such thing as an incompressible fluid; but the amount a liquid's volume changes under pressure is so little, that for many practical purposes it can be considered incompressible.
if the density of the fluid changes with respect to pressure is called compressible fluid f the density of the fluid does not changes with respect to pressure is called incompressible fluid
Yes, air is a compressible fluid. Water is not a compressible fluid.
No, if the pressure difference results in a density change of less than thirty percent (30%) the fluid may be treated as incompressible by assuming the density of the fluid equals the average density and that the density is constant. Source: Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics, Ron Darby, 2nd edition, page 115.
Yes, water is compressible, but to such a small degree that it is considered uncompressible. An example of this is that "A mile under water gives about 150 atmospheres of pressure... [which is] less than 1 percent compression" (Department of Physics: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign).
Can be compressed but not a fluid
if the density of the fluid changes with respect to pressure is called compressible fluid f the density of the fluid does not changes with respect to pressure is called incompressible fluid
The density of a compressible fluid changes with pressure, while the density of an incompressible fluid is not affected by pressure (assuming isothermal conditions).
Yes, air is a compressible fluid. Water is not a compressible fluid.
Nothing is inincompressible For practical propose, it defined water as incompressible since its' compressibility is very low. To compressed water down to 99/100 of original volume you would need a pressure of 217 Bar approximately. Any normal pressure vessel would burst at such pressure. It is then considered water as incompressible.
Which word do you not understand? incompressible - cannot be compressed viscous - resistant to flow, "thick" fluid - substance that flows (both gases and liquids are fluids, but gases are usually compressible; liquids generally aren't)
Ideal Fluid:An incompressible fluid that has no internal viscosity.
Fluids include liquids and gasses. Liquids are not compressible. Gasses are compressible. Water is a liquid and it not compressible.
No, if the pressure difference results in a density change of less than thirty percent (30%) the fluid may be treated as incompressible by assuming the density of the fluid equals the average density and that the density is constant. Source: Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics, Ron Darby, 2nd edition, page 115.
Yes, water is compressible, but to such a small degree that it is considered uncompressible. An example of this is that "A mile under water gives about 150 atmospheres of pressure... [which is] less than 1 percent compression" (Department of Physics: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign).
No, for gases if the difference in pressure results in a density change of less than approximately thirty percent (30%), the fluid may be treated as incompressible by assuming the density to be the average density which remains constant. Source: Chemical Engineering Fluid Mechanics, Ron Darby, 2nd edition, page 115.
Can be compressed but not a fluid
compressible fluid changes its volume when external pressure is applied and in-compressible fluid does not change its volume due to external pressure