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Keshu

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1. What is Pressure?

Pressure means force applied on a surface.

FORCE

Pressure= -----------

AREA

  • Same force on smaller area → more pressure

  • Same force on bigger area → less pressure

Example:

  • A sharp knife cuts easily because force is on a very small area.

  • Snow shoes stop you from sinking because force is spread over a large area.

2. Pressure in Gases

Gases (like air) are made of tiny particles moving freely and fast.

How gas pressure is produced:

  • Gas particles move randomly

  • They collide with the walls of a container

  • Each collision applies a tiny force

  • Millions of collisions create gas pressure

Important points:

  • More particles → more pressure

  • Higher temperature → particles move faster → more pressure

  • Smaller container → more collisions → more pressure

Example:

  • Pumping air into a bicycle tire increases pressure

  • Heating a sealed gas container increases pressure

3. Atmospheric Pressure

The Earth is surrounded by air called the atmosphere.

Why atmospheric pressure exists:

  • Air has mass

  • Gravity pulls air downward

  • The weight of air presses on everything

This pressure is called atmospheric pressure.

Key facts:

  • We don’t feel crushed because pressure inside our body balances it

  • Atmospheric pressure decreases with height

    • High mountains → lower pressure

    • Sea level → higher pressure

Example:

  • Ears popping when going up a mountain or in an airplane

4. Pressure in Liquids

Liquids also create pressure due to their weight.

Important rule:

Pressure in a liquid increases with depth

That means:

  • Shallow water → less pressure

  • Deep water → more pressure

This pressure acts:

  • In all directions

  • On the bottom and sides of the container

5. Pressure in Water

Water pressure depends on three main factors:

1. Depth (Most Important)

  • More depth → more water above you → more weight → more pressure

Formula idea

Pressure=ρgh

where:

  • ρ= density of water

  • g = gravity

  • h = depth

2. Density of the Liquid

  • Water creates more pressure than oil at the same depth

  • Denser liquids → more pressure

3. Gravity

  • Stronger gravity → more pressure (important in planets)

Real-life examples:

  • Dams are thicker at the bottom

  • Divers feel ear pain as they go deeper

  • Submarines need strong walls

Important note:

Water pressure does not depend on:

  • Shape of the container

  • Amount of water (only depth matters)

6. Particles and Pressure (Microscopic View)

Now let’s connect pressure to particles.

In gases:

  • Particles move fast

  • Pressure comes from collisions with surfaces

More collisions → more pressure

In liquids:

  • Particles are closer together

  • They move less freely than gas

  • Pressure is mainly due to weight of particles above

22 Views
Isai
Isai
Dec 20, 2025

Same in this post too, I’m not able to read it. Please fix it.


Ima

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