Pressure is defined as force per unit area. Given a pressure and an area over which is applies, the total force exerted is then the product of the pressure and the area. Such a force is called hydrostatic when the pressure is applied by a fluid such as water.
If is the area of a plane surface parallel to the surface of a fluid weighing lbs/, and at depth in the fluid, the total weigh of the fluid "sitting" on the submerged surface is . The pressure on this surface is lbs/.
It has been verified empirically that at depth , the pressure is the same for any direction. This observation makes it possible to calculate the total force on submerged surfaces that are not parallel to the surface of the fluid. In particular, the total hydrostatic force on a submerged surface that is perpendicular to the surface of a fluid is , where , the element of area, is taken as a narrow horizontal strip along which the pressure is constant.
It can be shown that the total hydrostatic force on such a vertical surface is the product of the area of the surface with the pressure at the centroid of the surface.