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A pressure, its units are Force/Unit area
Pressure equals force/area so from this you can get area equals force/pressure. plug in your numbers and get an area of 3. I'll let you work out the units
Yes. The correct formula establishes: P = (dF)/(dA). If the area is constant, you can integrate directly and obtain F = P · A Pressure units are Pascals (1 Pa = (1 N)/(1 m2)
force= pressure*area
Force (lbs) = Pressure (psi) x Area (in2)Pressure=Force/Area
A pressure, its units are Force/Unit area
The pressure on a surface is defined to be the net force on the surface divided by the surface's area. In other words, pressure is force per unit area. Mathematically, we would write the definition of pressure as Pressure = (Net Force)/Area. We can rearrange this equation using the rules of algebra to get Area = (Net Force)/Pressure. We can then replace Net Force and Pressure with the numerical values you have for them in order to get a numerical value for Area. Remember to check your units for the numerical values you have for Force and Pressure in order to get the correct unit for your numerical value of Area. For example, if your value for force is in units of Newtons, and your value for pressure is in units of Pascals, then your unit for Area would be square meters. Pascals are Newtons per square meter, canceling out the unit of Newtons in the denominator by dimensional analysis (units are treated as numerical constant factors). However, if your unit of pressure is something not so easily compatible with your unit for force, such as Newtons for force and Torr for pressure, then you should convert one or both units to compatible ones to get a meaningful numerical result.
Pressure equals force/area so from this you can get area equals force/pressure. plug in your numbers and get an area of 3. I'll let you work out the units
Pressure and area are different units. Area is the extent of a surface a two dimensional spatial unit. Pressure is force per area.
yes, force divided by area is pressure; its units are pounds per square inch, or newtons per square meter, for example. I you pull on an object with force over an area it is called stress
Yes. The correct formula establishes: P = (dF)/(dA). If the area is constant, you can integrate directly and obtain F = P · A Pressure units are Pascals (1 Pa = (1 N)/(1 m2)
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.
force divided by area (pounds per square inch ... tons per acre ... etc)
force= pressure*area
Force (lbs) = Pressure (psi) x Area (in2)Pressure=Force/Area
There are several appropriate units for each quantity. Here are some:Force: Newton, pound-force ("pound")Mass: Kilogram, poundal, pound-mass, slugAcceleration: meters per second2, feet per second2Weight: weight is force; use same units as forcePressure: (force divided by area): newtons per square meter, pounds per square inch
The area over which a force acts, is proportional to the pressure. When the area is large then, the pressure acted on it is also large, so the force is greater.