Surface pressure
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👩 Teacher’s Guide
🎯 Objective
Students will be able to:
- Explain the principles of surface pressure
- Use pressure equations and correct units
- Apply pressure concepts to fluids and gases
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📝 Teaching Notes
- Key idea to emphasize: Pressure is the force per unit area. Surface pressure explains why sharp objects exert greater pressure than blunt ones.
- Common misconception: Pressure only acts downward (it acts in all directions in fluids).
- Suggested teaching approach:
- Simple demonstrations (bottle holes, sponge pressure)
- Link particle theory to gas pressure
- Practice calculations with p = F/A and p = ρgh
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💬 Discussion Starter
Ask students:
- Why does pressure increase with depth in water?
- How does air pressure affect everyday life?
- Why do gases change pressure when heated?
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🧒 Student Worksheet
Concept and Helping Material
Pressure is the force per unit area. Surface pressure explains why sharp objects exert greater pressure than blunt ones.
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Vocabulary and Definitions
- — Force per unit area
- — Push or pull measured in newtons
- — Surface over which force acts
- — Unit of pressure (Pa)
- — Force per unit area in materials
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Hands-On Experiment or Activities
Activity 1: Pressure and area demo
What You Need: sponge, brick, ruler.
What You Do: Press brick flat then on its edge into sponge and compare depth.
Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?
Activity 2: Liquid pressure with holes
What You Need: plastic bottle, water, pin.
What You Do: Make holes at different heights, fill with water, observe jet distance.
Think and Talk: What changed? What stayed the same?
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Practice Questions (QA)
1. State the equation for pressure.
2. What is the unit of pressure?
3. Why do sharp knives cut better than blunt ones?
4. How does increasing area affect pressure (same force)?
5. How does increasing force affect pressure (same area)?
6. Why do snowshoes prevent sinking into snow?
7. What pressure does a 10 N force over 2 m² produce?
8. What is 1 Pa equal to?
9. Why can high heels damage floors?
10. What is surface pressure used for in design?
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Reflection
- Where do you experience pressure effects daily?
- Why is understanding pressure important in engineering?