Jump to content

Hydrostatic stress: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
where <math>i</math> is an index denoting each distinct layer of material above the point of interest, <math>\rho_i</math> is the [[density]] of each layer, <math>g</math> is the [[gravitational acceleration]] (assumed constant here; this can be substituted with any [[acceleration]] that is important in defining [[weight]]), and <math>h_i</math> is the height (or thickness) of each given layer of material. For example, the magnitude of the hydrostatic stress felt at a point under ten meters of fresh water would be
where <math>i</math> is an index denoting each distinct layer of material above the point of interest, <math>\rho_i</math> is the [[density]] of each layer, <math>g</math> is the [[gravitational acceleration]] (assumed constant here; this can be substituted with any [[acceleration]] that is important in defining [[weight]]), and <math>h_i</math> is the height (or thickness) of each given layer of material. For example, the magnitude of the hydrostatic stress felt at a point under ten meters of fresh water would be


:<math>\sigma_h = \rho_w g h_w =1000 \,\text{kg/m}^3 \cdot 9.8 \,\text{m/s}^2 \cdot 10 \,\text{m} =9.8 \cdot {10^4} \text{kg/ms}^2 =9.8 \cdot 10^4 \text{N m}^{-2} </math>
:<math>\sigma_h = \rho_w g h_w =1000 \,\text{kg/m}^3 \cdot 9.8 \,\text{m/s}^2 \cdot 10 \,\text{m} =9.8 \cdot {10^4} \text{kg/ms}^2 =9.8 \cdot 10^4 \text{ N m}^{-2} </math>


where the index <math>w</math> indicates "water".
where the index <math>w</math> indicates "water".

Revision as of 10:25, 30 October 2017

In continuum mechanics, a hydrostatic stress is an isotropic stress that is given by the weight of water above a certain point. It is often used interchangeably with "pressure" and is also known as confining stress, particularly in the field of geomechanics. Its magnitude can be given by:

where is an index denoting each distinct layer of material above the point of interest, is the density of each layer, is the gravitational acceleration (assumed constant here; this can be substituted with any acceleration that is important in defining weight), and is the height (or thickness) of each given layer of material. For example, the magnitude of the hydrostatic stress felt at a point under ten meters of fresh water would be

where the index indicates "water".

Because the hydrostatic stress is isotropic, it acts equally in all directions. In tensor form, the hydrostatic stress is equal to

where is the 3-by-3 identity matrix.