richard9678 said:
It's the notation I don't get. Area is measured in square meters. So, if I calculate the area of something that is 3m x 3m I'd give the answer as 9m2. I would not give the answer as 9m-2.
Nor should you. Area is measured in square units.
Okay, so, stress, which a a ratio of force / area is being expressed in terms of force in MN and area in square meters, or 1m2. I'd be indicating to the reader that where the axis indicates 1000 on the stress axis, that is to be read as 1000MN per metre squared.
Of course if area is 1m2 this is the same as 1/m2 which I think equals 1m-2.
Is m2 the same as m-2 is the same as 1/m2? If not, why not.
[Note: corrected this expression]
It is, which is why you must either write the units of stress as MN / m
2 or as MNm
-2. A unit of MNm
2 is not stress. It is 'mega Newtons times square meters'.
This is where you are getting mixed up. Stress is the ratio of applied force to the area on which it acts. A ratio of two quantities implies the division of one quantity by the other, so the ratio of a to b can be expressed in several ways:
a : b
##a \div b##
or a / b, where the '/' stands for 'is divided by'
The units for calculating stress in the SI system are the force in N divided by the area in square meters.
These units are abbreviated N / m
2, which is read as 'Newtons per square meter'. Some people prefer to replace the division of force by area instead with multiplication of the force by the reciprocal of the area, which is the same as saying force × 1 / the area.
Because the reciprocal of X
2 is the same as 1 / X
2 is the same as X
-2, then
N / m
2 is the same as Nm
-2. Notice, the latter expression has no ' / ', and because the two units N and m
-2 are written next to each other this implies multiplication.