Want this question answered?
About 6.38 atmospheres.
Is it because they are used by the manometer
1 bar (1000)mb is 14.5 psi. Atmospheric pressure varies a little but 1000mb is about the average.
500 mmHg or 500 torr is a gas pressure approximately 66% of the standard sea level air pressure of 760 torr ... it is the air pressure one would find at an altitude of approximately 3km or 10000 feet ... at sea level, 500 torr would be considered a partial vacuum of 0.66 atm.
1075 torr - 720 torr = 355 torr
About 6.38 atmospheres.
600 Torr (1 atm/760 Torr) = 0.789 atmospheres ================
Is it because they are used by the manometer
1 atm = 760 torr 2.2 atm X 760 torr/ 1 atm = 1672 torr i believe, i did the math in my head very quickly.
Two atmospheres is the pressure on a diver 10.3 metres underwater.
1 atmosphere pressure = 760 torr655 torr / ( 760 torr / ATM) = 0.86184 ATMIf you're not sure whether to multiply or divide when doing conversions, do this:655 torr . 1 ATM------------ * ---------1. . 760 torrThe formatting did not display exactly as I wanted it to appearThis is read like a fraction. Since 1 ATM = 760 torr, the numerator and denominator are equal, so it's like just multiplying by 1 and won't change the value.The torr units in numerator/denominator cancel out, and the only unit remaining is atmospheres.
456 = 4.56*102
there are several, like Pascals, mm of mercury, atmospheres, bars, torr, etc.
A torr is a unit of measurement for pressure. The unit is named after an Italian scientist named Evangelista Torricelli (1608-1647) who was a student of Galileo and invented the barometer. 1 torr = 1mm Hg (one millimeter mercury) 760 torr = 1 ATM (atmospheres) 760 torr = 14.7 lb/in^2
1 atm
1 bar (1000)mb is 14.5 psi. Atmospheric pressure varies a little but 1000mb is about the average.
It depends on the place where you are working. At the weather forecast in Europe it would possibly be 101.325 kPa for "one standard atmosphere". The following non-standard units are equivalent: 760 mmHg (torr), 29.92 inHg or 14.696 PSI.