Area equals Force/Pressure.
No, pressure is force divided by area.
Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.
For intance they say er,pressure is equals to force divide by area
pressure is force divided by area
That is called pressure. For example, the SI unit for pressure is the Pascal, which is equal to newtons / square meters.
No, pressure is force divided by area.
Pressure equals force divided by area.
Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.
For intance they say er,pressure is equals to force divide by area
pressure = force/area force = pressure x area area = force/pressure
pressure is force divided by area
That is called pressure. For example, the SI unit for pressure is the Pascal, which is equal to newtons / square meters.
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)
That is the force F. p = F / Awhere:p is the pressure,F is the normal force,A is the area (surface).
pressure is force divided by area
Pressure is the force exerted on an object divided by the area where the pressure was applied.
Force divided by area is pressure. If the force is in newtons and the area is in metres squared, the pressure will be in pascals (Pa).