I need help with this fill-in-the-blank paragraph for my physics assignment. I'm really stuck. I'll post the paragraph followed by the word bank: Every time you take a break of air or a drink of water, you are using ___________. A fluid is a substance that can easily ___________. ___________ in fluids are constantly moving. As paricles collide witha surface, they exert a force on the surface referred to as _______. The pressure created by the atmosphere above and around us is called _________. Pressure varies as water depth increases. As depth increases water pressure ______. __________ st
states that when a force is applied to a confined liquid, an increase in pressure is transmitted _______ t all parts of the fluid. This principle is used in _______. which use liquids to transmit pressure from one point to another.
Words bank: Hydraulic systems, air pressure, equally, flow, Pascals Principles, Particles, increases, fluid pressure, and fluids
Every time you take a breaTH of air or a drink of water, you are using FLUID PRESSURE. A fluid is a substance that can easily FLOW.
What do you think the answers to the next two are: ___________ in fluids are constantly moving. As paricles collide witha surface, they exert a force on the surface referred to as _______.
Particles and air pressure?
Particles, yes. Air pressure, no, since if the fluid is a liquid, it can't be air. So FLUID PRESSURE. Next two: The pressure created by the atmosphere above and around us is called _________. Pressure varies as water depth increases. As depth increases water pressure ______
Air pressure and increases, perhaps?
Yes. Last one's: ______ states that when a force is applied to a confined liquid, an increase in pressure is transmitted _______ to all parts of the fluid. This principle is used in _______. which use liquids to transmit pressure from one point to another.
Pascal's principle. Equally. Fluids.
Yes, yes, no. What's the last one?
Hydraulic systems?
Yes.
Thank-you so much!
Sure. You might enjoy this lecture: http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/physics/8-01-physics-i-classical-mechanics-fall-1999/video-lectures/lecture-28/
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