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The bulk strain results from the bulk stress, which is a force normal to a surface that presses on the unit surface area A of a submerged object. This kind of physical quantity, or pressure p , is defined as
We will study pressure in fluids in greater detail in Fluid Mechanics . An important characteristic of pressure is that it is a scalar quantity and does not have any particular direction; that is, pressure acts equally in all possible directions. When you submerge your hand in water, you sense the same amount of pressure acting on the top surface of your hand as on the bottom surface, or on the side surface, or on the surface of the skin between your fingers. What you are perceiving in this case is an increase in pressure over what you are used to feeling when your hand is not submerged in water. What you feel when your hand is not submerged in the water is the normal pressure of one atmosphere, which serves as a reference point. The bulk stress is this increase in pressure, or over the normal level,
When the bulk stress increases, the bulk strain increases in response, in accordance with [link] . The proportionality constant in this relation is called the bulk modulus, B , or
The minus sign that appears in [link] is for consistency, to ensure that B is a positive quantity. Note that the minus sign is necessary because an increase in pressure (a positive quantity) always causes a decrease in volume, and decrease in volume is a negative quantity. The reciprocal of the bulk modulus is called compressibility or
The term ‘compressibility’ is used in relation to fluids (gases and liquids). Compressibility describes the change in the volume of a fluid per unit increase in pressure. Fluids characterized by a large compressibility are relatively easy to compress. For example, the compressibility of water is and the compressibility of acetone is This means that under a 1.0-atm increase in pressure, the relative decrease in volume is approximately three times as large for acetone as it is for water.
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