Pressure is force / area. If you divide that by force, you get 1 / area. I am not aware that this is used in any meaningful way in physics.
Force divided by area is pressure. If the force is in newtons and the area is in metres squared, the pressure will be in pascals (Pa).
pressure = force/area force = pressure x area area = force/pressure
Pressure equals force divided by area.
Force Divided by area
Volume
Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.Pressure. Actually, pressure is a force divided by an area.
pressure is force divided by area
Area equals Force/Pressure.
That is the force F. p = F / Awhere:p is the pressure,F is the normal force,A is the area (surface).
pressure is force divided by area
Pressure is the force exerted on an object divided by the area where the pressure was applied.
Force divided by area is pressure. If the force is in newtons and the area is in metres squared, the pressure will be in pascals (Pa).
No, pressure is force divided by area.
The force that is exerted on a surface divided by the area of the area is pressure. The standard unit of pressure is the Pascal.
What is the pressure definition? p = F / A Pressure is force divided by area.
That's the pressure on that particular area.
I am not sure what you are trying to calculate. Pressure is defined as force divided by area.