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🌈 Rainbow Mind Map of Pressure
Explore pressure with a new interactive rainbow mind map, animated pressure lab, force-area simulator, real-life examples, video, quiz and HOTS questions.
🌈 Pressure Rainbow Mind Map
🔴 Definition
- Pressure is force acting per unit area.
- It tells how concentrated a force is.
🟠 Formula
- Pressure = Force ÷ Area
- P = F / A
🟡 SI Unit
- Pascal (Pa)
- 1 Pa = 1 N/m²
🟢 Area Effect
- Smaller area gives more pressure.
- Larger area gives less pressure.
🔵 Force Effect
- More force gives more pressure.
- Less force gives less pressure.
🟣 Daily Examples
- Sharp knife cuts easily.
- School bag straps are broad.
- Snow shoes have large area.
⚫ Fluid Pressure
- Liquids exert pressure.
- Pressure increases with depth.
🧠 Key Point
- Pressure depends on both force and area.
- Same force can give different pressure.
🖼️ Image Section
▶ Watch: Rainbow Mind Map of Pressure
Watch the video and then test your understanding with the pressure lab and quiz.
Embedded YouTube video included as requested.
🧪 Interactive Pressure Lab
Change the Area and Watch Pressure Change
Move the slider. Smaller area means greater pressure for the same force.
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Force
Area is large, so pressure is lower.
Pressure = Force ÷ Area
P = F / A
Important: For the same force, pressure increases when area decreases.
Pressure
Pressure is force acting per unit area.
🧮 Pressure Calculator
Find Pressure
Use: Pressure = Force ÷ Area
Find Force
Use: Force = Pressure × Area
Real-Life Pressure Choice
✅ Pressure Quiz
Select the correct answer and click submit to check your score.
🧠 HOTS Questions
Click each question to reveal the answer.
1. Why does a sharp needle pierce cloth easily?
A sharp needle has a very small contact area, so it produces high pressure with little force.
2. Why are school bag straps made broad?
Broad straps increase contact area and reduce pressure on the shoulders.
3. Why do camels walk easily on sand?
Camels have broad feet, which increase area and reduce pressure on sand.
4. Why are dams thicker at the bottom?
Liquid pressure increases with depth, so dams need thicker bases to withstand greater pressure.
5. How can the same force create different pressure?
The same force creates higher pressure on a smaller area and lower pressure on a larger area.

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