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Astronomy and Cosmology
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Hydrostatic pressure in a bottle of water on ISS
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[QUOTE="256bits, post: 6820350, member: 328943"] In that regard, if the pressure in the "middle" is different than at the sides, so you would measure a difference in pressure between two points. I suppose one could measure the stress/strain on a wall of the spacecraft and compare that to another and convert that to a pressure. PS. I think objects are attracted to the walls through mutual gravitation rather than any pressure gradient that might exist throughout the ship. PS_2 - one also has the friction drag of the spacecraft through the atmosphere, which would appear as an acceleration ( deceleration ). The 'front' end of the ship would have a slightly higher air pressure than the rear. [/QUOTE]
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Hydrostatic pressure in a bottle of water on ISS
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