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What is Pressure?
Everyone knows what happens if you put too much air into a balloon. If
the air pressure inside the balloon is too much greater than the
pressure outside, the balloon bursts. But what is this thing called
pressure?
Have you read the page on the Ideal Gas Law
equation yet? Although this equation doesn't tell you why; it states
that the amount of pressure on the walls of a container is directly
proportional to both the amount of gas inside, and the temperature of that gas (which incidentally, explains why pressure cookers work).
If you haven't yet read the page explaining what temperature is, read it now.
As you know, gas molecules have kinetic energy - they fly around the
room, at a speed which specifies the gas's temperature. When they hit
walls or other objects, they bounce off. (The same goes for molecules
in liquids, although they move around in a slightly different fashion.)
When they hit the walls of the container however, they exert a force of
those walls - just as a ball would if you threw it at a window. The
amount of resulting force on a wall or other object, acting on each
unit of surface area of that object, is called pressure. It's that simple.
For example, if you measure force in pounds and surface area in square
inches, then you could measure pressure in pounds per square inch, or
PSI for short. PSI is a common unit of pressure for things like car
tyres - and of course there is a rated maximum number of pounds of
force that each square inch of rubber tyre can handle without running
the risk of it bursting - it's printed on the side of the tyre.
The units that physicists more often use however are kilopascals (kPa). Pascals
(Pa) are actually units of newtons (of force) per square meter (area).
And a kilopascal is simply a thousand pascals. So 23 kPa is actually
23000 N/m2 of pressure.
(A solid object, such as a person sitting in a chair, can also exert
a force-per-unit-area on another object; and this is measured in kPa or
PSI in just the same way. But if the object doing the pushing is a
solid mass, then it's called stress instead of pressure.)
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