10 p over 10 m2
if force increaces and area stays the same then pressure
Each molecule bounces off an object pushing a little bit of force on that object. These add up to create the overall force. How_does_the_movement_of_air_molecules_cause_air_pressurethousands of baseballs hitting a moving wall the balls will push the wall. This is basically a scaled up version of a demonstration of how pressure works.Read more: How_does_the_movement_of_air_molecules_cause_air_pressure
Only if it is an unbalanced force
Pressure
its because the water puts fluid pressure everywhere on the object which creates a bouyant force.
10 P over 10 m2
greater pressure on less surface area!
area
area
blood pressure
pressure
500P
pressure is calculated in solids by using these formulae which is proposed gopi force / area
No, in fact you would be increasing the pressure. What you would have to do is increase the area while keeping the force constant which then would decrease the pressure.
No! Pressure is force per unit area: p=f/a. Thus it does not require a large force to produce a large pressure; reducing the area increases the pressure for the same applied force. The thumbtack, for example, can be considered to be a pressure amplifier since a small force applied to the head becomes a very large force at the pointed end of the thumbtack. Not if you have a narrow bore pipe.
i's true
It is called buoyant force. It is calculated by determining the volume of water displaced by the object, which is the volume of the object under water.The weight of this quantity of water is the buoyant force. It can also be calculated by knowing the depth of the object in the water, the pressure at that depth, and the area of the bottom of the object. Buoyant Force = Pressure * depth It can also be calculated by knowing the weight of the object. If an object is floating the water is supporting the object's weight. So the buoyant force = weight of object