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Stress. When Forces Cause A Compression of An Object, We Call It A Compressive Stress. When An Object Is Being Squeezed From All Sides, Like A Submarine in The Depths

A rigid body model approximates objects that do not deform under forces. The extent an object can be considered rigid depends on its material properties. Both ping pong balls and tennis balls can be modeled as rigid bodies under some circumstances. Similarly, prosthetic limbs can approximate human limbs as rigid bodies. Stress is defined as force per unit area and describes the magnitude of forces causing deformation, such as tensile, compressive, shear, and bulk stresses. Common stress units include the pascal and pound per square inch.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

Stress. When Forces Cause A Compression of An Object, We Call It A Compressive Stress. When An Object Is Being Squeezed From All Sides, Like A Submarine in The Depths

A rigid body model approximates objects that do not deform under forces. The extent an object can be considered rigid depends on its material properties. Both ping pong balls and tennis balls can be modeled as rigid bodies under some circumstances. Similarly, prosthetic limbs can approximate human limbs as rigid bodies. Stress is defined as force per unit area and describes the magnitude of forces causing deformation, such as tensile, compressive, shear, and bulk stresses. Common stress units include the pascal and pound per square inch.

Uploaded by

DI VAV
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A model of a rigid body is an idealized example of an object that does not deform under

the actions of external forces. It is very useful when analyzing mechanical systems—
and many physical objects are indeed rigid to a great extent. The extent to which an
object can be perceived as rigid depends on the physical properties of the material from
which it is made. For example, a ping-pong ball made of plastic is brittle, and a tennis
ball made of rubber is elastic when acted upon by squashing forces. However, under
other circumstances, both a ping-pong ball and a tennis ball may bounce well as rigid
bodies. Similarly, someone who designs prosthetic limbs may be able to approximate
the mechanics of human limbs by modeling them as rigid bodies; however, the actual
combination of bones and tissues is an elastic medium.

For the remainder of this chapter, we move from consideration of forces that affect the
motion of an object to those that affect an object’s shape. A change in shape due to the
application of a force is known as a deformation. Even very small forces are known to
cause some deformation. Deformation is experienced by objects or physical media
under the action of external forces—for example, this may be squashing, squeezing,
ripping, twisting, shearing, or pulling the objects apart. In the language of physics, two
terms describe the forces on objects undergoing deformation: stress and strain.

Stress is a quantity that describes the magnitude of forces that cause deformation.
Stress is generally defined as force per unit area. When forces pull on an object and
cause its elongation, like the stretching of an elastic band, we call such stress a tensile
stress. When forces cause a compression of an object, we call it a compressive
stress. When an object is being squeezed from all sides, like a submarine in the depths
of an ocean, we call this kind of stress a bulk stress (or volume stress). In other
situations, the acting forces may be neither tensile nor compressive, and still produce a
noticeable deformation. For example, suppose you hold a book tightly between the
palms of your hands, then with one hand you press-and-pull on the front cover away
from you, while with the other hand you press-and-pull on the back cover toward you. In
such a case, when deforming forces act tangentially to the object’s surface, we call
them ‘shear’ forces and the stress they cause is called shear stress.

The SI unit of stress is the pascal (Pa). When one newton of force presses on a unit
surface area of one meter squared, the resulting stress is one pascal:

\text{one pascal}=1.0\,\text{Pa}=\frac{1.0\,\text{N}}{1.0\,{\text{m}}^{2}}.

In the British system of units, the unit of stress is ‘psi,’ which stands for ‘pound per
square inch’ ({\text{lb/in}}^{2}). Another unit that is often used for bulk stress is the atm
(atmosphere). Conversion factors are

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