Thrust and Pressure

📚 Key Concepts
🔹 Real-Life Example
A woman wearing high heels exerts more pressure on the ground than an elephant! This seems impossible, but the small area of the heel concentrates all her weight into a tiny point. Similarly, a sharp knife cuts easily because its thin edge creates high pressure, while a blunt knife with larger contact area creates less pressure.
🔹 Thrust: The force acting on an object perpendicular to the surface.
Pressure: The thrust per unit area.


🧪 Important Formulas and Units
🔸 Mathematical Relationship
Pressure = Thrust / Area
P = F / A
- P = Pressure (Pa or N/m²)
- F = Force/Thrust (N)
- A = Area (m²)
🔹 Units
- SI Unit: Pascal (Pa) = N/m²
- Other Units:
- Atmosphere (atm): 1 atm = 1.01 × 10⁵ Pa
- Bar: 1 bar = 10⁵ Pa
- Torr: 1 torr = 133.3 Pa
🔹 Applications of Pressure
- High Pressure Examples: Needles, knives, thumbtacks (small area)
- Low Pressure Examples: Snowshoes, camel feet, tank treads (large area)

🔍 Advanced: Atmospheric Pressure and Pascal’s Law
- Atmospheric Pressure: 1.01 × 10⁵ Pa at sea level
- Pascal’s Law: Pressure applied to a confined fluid is transmitted equally in all directions
🔹 Real-Life Examples
- Camel feet: Wide and flat to distribute weight on sand
- Woman’s heel: Concentrated force creates high pressure
- Hydraulic brakes: Apply Pascal’s law to stop vehicles efficiently

