Science, asked by herobrine135792021, 17 days ago

can someone explain me this​

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Answered by manishadhiman31
1

Answer:

we know that Thrust = Pressure × Area and pressure is force/area. So we substitute pressure in the thrust formula and we get: Thrust= Force/Area*Area. Which simplifies to Thrust = Force.

Answered by pakidosgraphics
1

Explanation:

The definition of a thrust is the act of pushing with force. Force exerted by an object perpendicular to the surface is called thrust. An example of thrust is a fish being expelled from the ocean by a strong wave.

Pressure is the force exerted by any object per unit area

(force per unit area is the force applied to a unit area of surface; measured in pascals)

mathematically, pressure is known as:

Pressure=Force/Area. Or, Pressure=Thrust/Area

The SI unit (International System of Units) of pressure is Pascal (Pa).

Like how force is measure in Newton (N) and area in metres square (m2) and length in metres (m).

Larger unit of pressure is kilopascal (kPa). Just as, 1 kg = 1000 g,

1 kPa = 1000 Pa

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Hope this helps you! ^-^

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