Pascal is an alternative unit of pressure to atmospheres. 1atm is 101325pa
"mm Hg" stands for millimetres of mercury. Atmospheric pressure was measured in terms of the height of a column of mercury that it could support and by extension, mm Hg became a unit for measuring pressure.
If you mean one aestronomical unit one astronomical unit (AU) , the answer is 150,000,000,000 meters.
70 kilometers is 43.5 miles. Sometimes the letter 'K' refers to thousands so 70K can also mean 70,000
You possibly mean GW-BASIC which is allegedly named after Microsoft employee, Greg Whitten. According to Whitten, Bill Gates picked the name, however it's never been clarified whether GW was named after Whitten or Gates himself (Gates, William), or both (Gates, Whitten), or something else entirely. Whitten refers to it as Gee-Whiz BASIC. It was written by Microsoft while Whitten himself developed the standards in the Microsoft BASIC line. Mozart Programming System is another possibility, developed by the Mozart Consortium. Shakespeare is another, developed by Jon Åslund and Karl Hasselström. Ada is another possibility, except Ada Lovelace (Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace) was female. Pascal is named after mathematician Blaise Pascal, created by Niklaus Wirth. Eiffel, created by Bertrand Meyer, might be named after Gustave Eiffel.
a force is a push or a pull for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction
Pascal is an alternative unit of pressure to atmospheres. 1atm is 101325pa
1 Pascal (plural Pascals) is a unit used to measure pressure. Abbreviated Pa.
Pressure is always to my knowledge a P. I assume you mean the symbol for pascal though. This is Pa
You would never see an expression like that. 'Pascal' already includes the concept of unit area (just as any other unit of 'pressure' does). It means "newton of force on each square meter". 5 pascals = 5 newton/m2
Which Pascal compiler do you mean? Pascal compiler can be written in Pascal, of course.
Do you mean how to convert from English units? The English equivalent is pounds per square inch, or psi. A pascal is 1 newton per square meter. A kilogram is 2.2 pounds and a Newton is 0.102 Kg and a meter is 39.37 inches. So ONE PSI = (1)*(39.37)*(39.37)/2.2/.102 or about 6900 Pascals (Pa) John
It means 'What does Pascal say ?'
PASCAL is not an acronym. It was named for Blaise Pascal, a French mathematician who was a pioneer in computer development.
400 Kilo Pascals... it is a measure of pressure.
I think you mean Blaise Pascal and I'm pretty sure he invented the mechanical calculator
mega pascal
PSI, pound per square inch. +++ Or in SI units, Pascals (Pa) - but these are so tiny that you need thousands (kPa) or millions (MPa) of them to get anywhere. Unless you are measuring sound pressure in linear units, in gases or in liquids, then they are too big so you need to use millionths of Pascals (µPa, pron. "micro-Pascal"). For everyday use the Bar is admissible: 1Bar is atmospheric pressure at standard temperature at mean sea-level, and = 100kPa.