The pressure exerted by a liquid increases with depth. This is known as hydrostatic pressure and is directly proportional to the density of the liquid. The pressure variation with direction is isotropic, meaning it is the same regardless of the direction taken in the liquid.
The force is pressure the same as when you are airborne in a figherjet.The deeper you get the stronger the pressure gets.Please like my photo on face book.My name is matthew Spiteri
Gravity. Water will always take the path of least resistance, which is sideways. And if there is pressure from the top, Pascal's principle is in affect which states that when pressure is applied to the top of a body of water the resulting affect is pressure on all other sides of the body of water.
Counter clockwise looking from the top. The same direction a tropical depression or low pressure area spins.
It (1) provides a means of connecting a rotating coil to the external circuit, and (2) it is a rotating switch which ensures that the direction of the current through the coil always acts in the same direction relative to the magnetic field in order to ensure its torque acts in the same direction.
Pressure is the same whether hot or cold.
A low pressure system has converging winds and rotates in the same direction that our Earth does.
To install a water pressure regulator, first turn off the main water supply. Then, locate the current pressure regulator and remove it. Install the new regulator in the same location, making sure it is facing the correct direction. Connect the pipes securely and turn the water supply back on to test the new regulator. Adjust the pressure setting if needed.
Not really. Salt water is denser(that's why you float better in the sea), so pressure will be greater.
Yes, water pressure at the same depth is determined by the height of the water column, not the shape of the container. As long as the depth is the same in both containers, the water pressure will be equal.
Friction acts opposite to the direction of movement. It resists the sliding or rolling motion of objects in contact with each other.
Same direction as the engine.