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=== How is pressure different from stress? ===
 
=== How is pressure different from stress? ===
 
Pressure is a scalar quantity, which is simply a normal force acting per unit area on a surface, whereas stress is a tensor quantity that acts in all three directions. Scalar and tensor could be better understood with a simple example. Let's take a simple and pretty little cube. If a force acts normal to all the six faces, then there would be a definite pressure acting on each of the faces, distributed evenly (isotropic). But in the case of stress, the stress could act on all directions. There is the shear stress acting parallel to the faces, and there is the normal stress acting perpendicular to the faces. Therefore, pressure is a type of stress where the direction of it is definite at all points. Technically, pressure is a tensor of order 0.
 
Pressure is a scalar quantity, which is simply a normal force acting per unit area on a surface, whereas stress is a tensor quantity that acts in all three directions. Scalar and tensor could be better understood with a simple example. Let's take a simple and pretty little cube. If a force acts normal to all the six faces, then there would be a definite pressure acting on each of the faces, distributed evenly (isotropic). But in the case of stress, the stress could act on all directions. There is the shear stress acting parallel to the faces, and there is the normal stress acting perpendicular to the faces. Therefore, pressure is a type of stress where the direction of it is definite at all points. Technically, pressure is a tensor of order 0.
 
=== How is pressure related to temperature? ===
 
Pressure is directly proportional to temperature of a system. This has been explained in the past with several gas laws like Boyle's law, Charle's law, Gay-Lussac's law, which related pressure, volume, and temperature. Later, these laws were combined into a single law and with addition of Avogadro's law, the [[ideal gas law]] was formulated.
 
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