A hydraulic press is an ancient machine, but it has retained its significance to the present day. Take a look at Figure 1 depicting a hydraulic press. Two pistons—small and large—can move in a vessel with water. If we press one piston with our hand, the pressure is transmitted to the other piston—it will rise. Just as much water will rise above the initial position of the second piston as the first piston presses down into the vessel.

If the areas of the pistons are
We shall find such a condition without difficulty, starting out from the fact that the work performed by the balancing forces should be equal to zero. Then during the displacement of the pistons the works done by the forces exerted on them should be equal (with opposite signs). Therefore,
With the aid of a hydraulic press, one can forge and punch metals, press the juice out of grapes and raise weights.
Of course, the gain in force will be accompanied by a loss in path. In order to compress a body by 1 cm with a press, one’s hand would have to cover a path as many times greater as the forces
Physicists call the ratio of the force to the area,
Instead of the relation
It turns out, therefore, that the pressure within a liquid is the same at all its points and in all the directions. In other words, an identical force is exerted on area elements of a definite size, irrespective of their orientation. This fact is called Pascal’s law.