Question detail

Define pressure in terms of force and area Explain your answer using Pressure in liquids (physics only) and physics only.

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

Question

Type

exam_style

Style

Topic

Pressure and pressure differences in fluids (physics only)

Question

Define pressure in terms of force and area Explain your answer using Pressure in liquids (physics only) and physics only.

Answer

Pressure is defined as the force applied per unit area. It can be mathematically expressed as pressure = force / area.

Explanation

A strong answer should address (Physics only) Apply MS 3b and MS 3c skills when rearranging liquid-pressure equations directly. Use the context of Pressure in liquids (physics only) within Pressure and pressure differences in fluids (physics only), then state the relevant forces or motion reasoning with units where needed. The answer is correct when it names the key physics quantity, keeps force and pressure distinct, and links the conclusion back to the approved learning objective.

Common mistake

Common Mistake in Rearranging Pressure Equations

Students often confuse the variables when rearranging the liquid-pressure equation, leading to incorrect calculations of pressure, depth, or density.

To fix this, carefully identify each variable in the equation and ensure you understand the relationships between pressure, depth, and density. Practice rearranging the equation step-by-step, checking that each variable is correctly isolated. In Pressure in liquids (physics only), correct the mistake by naming the relevant force or motion quantity and checking force and pressure.

Related flashcards

Flashcard 1 of 5

Press Space to flip, arrows to move

Related practice questions

Question 1 of 5

Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.

0 of 5 attempted
exam Q1: skills when rearranging liquid-pr… | Pressure and… | ExamCompanion