![]() You can try this yourself with a narrow tube (I would say make it considerably smaller in inner diameter than a sixteenth of an inch). The point where this pressure law brakes down is when the surface tension of the water starts to play a leading role. If the math does break down at some point. I want that to be true cost wise but can't wrap my head around it because it seems to fall apart in the extreme hypothetical case where at some point there just isn't enough water to exert 1000lbs. I ask this because the math says that structurally I can double the volume of the tank just by increasing the same materials in the width without any additional support required. And if I theoretically continue to halve until the tank only holds 1 ounce of water the that 1 ounce still exerts 1000 lbs on the long side. Same formula states that since only depth matters in pressure then if I halve the width of the tank (front to back) then the total force on the long side remains the same 1000 lbs. 43 is psi per foot of depth and average psi is at depth 1 foot in this case. ![]() Read more Calculate the frequency of each of the following wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation.I building a tank for water 2ft high, 2ft wide (front to back), 8 feet long (left to right) Common formulas dictate the total force on the long sides is approx 1000lbs (w x h x.
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