A little late but I hope it helps, but you dont actually square it as its inches squared which is a unit of area, you cancel out the 5 and .002 which are both measured in inches and leave lb/in^2 which leaves you with the end result of 28571428 PSI, as in pounds per square inch.
Straight to the point clear and concise! great video.
This is a Godsend. I was so lost until now
Thank god I found this video. Directions where very clear 👍
Honestly explain perfectly
If you still reading comments, thank you!
E=28571428 psi in the video lecture means that the sample in question will break apart at this pressure?
Please is it a gradient
really helpful! thanks
What is the difference between Young's Modulus and the Elastic Modulus?
its the samething just different names
What if I dont have the Ao and lo
can you work 3-5?
when you were calculating in your calculator did you forget to square the .7?
A little late but I hope it helps, but you dont actually square it as its inches squared which is a unit of area, you cancel out the 5 and .002 which are both measured in inches and leave lb/in^2 which leaves you with the end result of 28571428 PSI, as in pounds per square inch.