Wiki User
∙ 6y agoYou can't say 'pressure per square inch. It's just 'pressure', which equals force per square inch. You divide the person's weight by the area of the foot in contact with the stairs to get the answer.
Wiki User
∙ 6y agoNone. No human nor animal has a square face.
A square is all of these:-- square-- rectangle-- rhombus-- parallelogram-- quadrilateral.We wouldn't say that these are different "names" for a square. They're actual thingsthat the square IS. Just as a 'woman' is also a 'female' and a 'human being', all at thesame time.
50 million
A tenth of a square foot - if it is stacked 2 kilometres high!
i do not beleive that humans have the technology to have made a calculator that measures strate from the stream of blood the doctors have to extract blood in order to find a blood pressure
A human bite can exert a pressure of around 150-200 pounds per square inch.
An average human hug exerts about 10 pounds per square inch of pressure. This pressure can vary depending on the strength and duration of the hug.
780 psi per square cm
500
An ordinary human standing exerts a pressure equivalent to the body weight divided by the area in contact with the ground. On average, this pressure is about 10-15 pounds per square inch (psi).
It would only take about 30 pounds of pressure per square inch to break a human neck. At 25 pounds of pressure, it causes instant unconsciousness.
It's about 1,000lbs per square inch. A human bite by comparison is 120.
The pressure inside the human body is typically around 760 mmHg (millimeters of mercury) at sea level. This pressure is generated by the weight of the air in the atmosphere pushing down on the body. Changes in pressure can occur during activities like scuba diving or flying in an airplane.
A human is under an average pressure of about 14.7 pounds per square inch (psi) at sea level on Earth due to the weight of the atmosphere pressing down on them. This pressure decreases at higher altitudes and increases underwater.
Stairs, Bathrooms and getting out of cars.
On average, a human hand can squeeze with about 20-30 pounds of pressure per square inch. However, this can vary based on individual strength and hand size.
When you describe and object like it is being a human for exsample