Actually, it is 2150000000 N/m2. That is, one thousand million times larger. Ehem. Talking about basics...marekk wrote:...
BTW: water is compressible, it's bulk modulus elasticity is 2.15 N/m2.
If water had this kind of bulk modulus (2.15 Pascals) it would be the most compressible thing in the Universe. It would diminish 50% in volume under 1 Pascal of pressure.
For example, 1 Pascals is the pressure of a peso bill (or a pound banknote) on a counter...
Air, for example, has a bulk modulus of 105000 N/m2 (at constant temperature), that is, 4 orders of magnitude smaller than water.
So, air is 20000 times more compressible than water. Water is less compressible than solid rock (around 0.7 times).
At 300 kph, which is like 0.25 Mach, air is compressed around 5%, but only in stagnation points. Around the rest of the car, the air is compressed much less.
On the other hand, the pressure of a regular turbo compressor is somewhere between 15 and 20 pounds per square inch. As atmospheric pressure is .... (wait a minute) around 14 pounds per square inch (not sure, darn american units!), you can see that a turbo is increasing density over 100%.
Now, if you compare the 5% increase in density at some points of an F1 car with the 100% increase in density of a turbo compressor, it's easy to understand why you could assume that air is incompressible when doing some calculations on the aerodynamic of a car, while you cannot discard the compressibility of air when designing a turbo.