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Pressure
An important property of fluids is pressure. Suppose we imagine surrounding a
given volume of fluid (liquid or gas) by a container. The atoms and molecules of the fluid
will bounce off the walls of the container, thereby changing their velocity. This change
of velocity, by Newton's 2nd law, comes from a force, which is the action of the wall on
the molecule. By Newton's 3rd law the molecule exerts an equal and opposite force on the
wall. The pressure of the fluid is defined as the average force of the molecules on the
wall per unit area:
Given a large volume of fluid, you can image putting a wall anywhere within the fluid, so
that pressure is not something that is just defined at the boundaries (i.e. by the
container), but is in fact defined, and can be felt or measured throughout the fluid. This
is why the pressure increases as one goes down in the ocean - as one descends, there is
more and more fluid above, which exerts a larger and larger force on a given area.
Similarly, the pressure in the atmosphere, is quite literally due to the weight of the air
over our heads pressing down on us. As one goes up in altitude, there is less air above
and the air pressure decreases. The forces due to air pressure are very large near sea
level: 100,000 Newtons per square meter of force pressing against us. The reason we don't
implode is that the pressure of fluids inside our body (blood in veins, air in lungs etc)
is equal to the pressure from the atmosphere outside, and there is no net force inward.
However, slight pressure changes can have devastating effects. This is why diving too deep
underwater can be dangerous. The extra pressure due to the weight of the water over your
head causes huge forces which can literally crush you. This also explains why deep sea
divers must have air under high pressure in their tanks. This way the air that they take
into their lungs is approximately at the same pressure as the water pushing inward on
their lungs, which would otherwise collapse.
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