Pascal (pressure)

Pascal (pressure)

The pascal (symbol: Pa) is the SI derived unit of pressure, stress, Young's modulus and tensile strength. It is a measure of perpendicular force per unit area i.e. equivalent to one newton per square meter or one joule per cubic metre. In everyday life, the pascal is perhaps best known from meteorological barometric pressure reports, where it occurs in the form of hectopascals(1 hPa = 100 Pa). [ [http://www.ofcm.gov/fmh-1/fmh1.htm U.S. Federal Meteorological Handbook] ] . In other contexts, the kilopascal is more commonly used, for example on bicycle tire labels. [ISO 5775: Bicycle tires and rims] One hectopascal corresponds to about 0.1% and one kilopascal to about 1% of atmospheric pressure (near sea level): one hectopascal is thus equivalent to a millibar; one atmosphere is equal to 1013.25 hPa.

Definition

:1 pascal (Pa) ≡ 1 N/m2 ≡ 1 J/m3 ≡ 1 kg/(m·s2)

Origin

The unit is named after Blaise Pascal, the eminent French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher noted for his experiments with a barometer, an instrument to measure air pressure.The name "pascal" was adopted for the SI unit newton per square metre by the 14th CGPM in 1971. [http://www.bipm.fr/en/convention/cgpm/14/pascal-siemens.html]

Miscellaneous

Standard atmospheric pressure is 101,325 Pa = 101.325 kPa = 1013.25 hPa = 1013.25 mbar = 760 Torr. This definition is used for pneumatic fluid power (ISO R554), and in the aerospace (ISO 2533) and petroleum (ISO 5024) industries.

In 1985, IUPAC recommended that standard atmospheric pressure should be harmonized to 100,000 Pa = 1 bar = 750 Torr. The same definition is used in the compressor and the pneumatic tool industries (ISO 2787). [cite web| url=http://www.compressor.co.za/news/may%20news.htm|title=http://www.compressor.co.za/news/may%20news.htm]

The Unicode computer character set has dedicated symbols Unicode|㎩ (U+|33A9) for Pa and Unicode|㎪ (U+|33AA) for kPa, but these exist merely for backward-compatibility with some older ideographic character-sets and are therefore deprecated.

Uses

The pascal (Pa) or kilopascal (kPa) as a unit of pressure measurement is widely used throughout the world and largely replaces the pounds per square inch (psi) unit except in some countries still using the imperial measurement system.

Another unit for pressure measurement in common use today is millimetres of water (1 mmH2O = 9.80665 Pa).

Meteorologists worldwide have for a long time measured atmospheric pressure in millibars. After the introduction of SI units, many preferred to preserve the customary pressure figures. Therefore, meteorologists use hectopascals (hPa) today for air pressure, which are equivalent to millibars, while similar pressures are given in kilopascals in practically all other fields, where the hecto prefix is hardly ever used. Since official metrication, meteorologists in Canada use kilopascals (kPa), see for example [http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/HTMLTemplate/!ctvDynNews/Weather/Weather?City=Montreal CTV News, weather; current conditions in Montréal] and [http://www.cbc.ca/weather/conditions.jsp?station=YUL CBC weather, current conditions in Montréal] , although in some other countries hectopascals are still in use, see for example [http://www.knmi.nl/actueel/ KNMI] , [http://www.kmi.be/nederlands/index.php?menu=Menu1_3 KMI] , [http://www.dwd.de/de/WundK/W_aktuell/Beobachtungen.htm DWD] , [http://www.jma.go.jp/en/g3/index.html JMA] , [http://www.meteoam.it/modules.php?name=analisiPrevisioniSuolo MDD] and [http://weather.noaa.gov/weather/current/KDCA.html NOAA] .

: 1 hectopascal (hPa) ≡ 100 Pa ≡ 1 mbar.: 1 kilopascal (kPa) ≡ 1000 Pa ≡ 10 hPa ≡ 10 mbar.

In the former mts system, the unit of pressure is the pièze (symbol pz), which is equal to one kilopascal.

In the former cgs system, the unit of pressure is the barye (symbol ba), which is equal to one decipascal.

Vehicle owners' guides now specify tire inflation in kilopascals.

Airtightness testing of buildings is measured at 50 Pa or 0.2 inches of water.

See also

* Pascal's law
* Orders of magnitude (pressure)

References


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