Mechanics of materials for dummies / by James H. Allen III, PE, PHD.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
AAMUSTED LIBRARY, KUMASI Lending Book Shelf | TA404.8 .A18 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 0000009738 | |
![]() |
AAMUSTED LIBRARY, KUMASI Lending Book Shelf | TA404.8 .A18 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 0000009740 | |
![]() |
AAMUSTED LIBRARY, KUMASI Lending Book Shelf | TA404.8 .A18 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 3 | Available | 0000009739 | |
![]() |
AAMUSTED LIBRARY, KUMASI Reference | TA404.8 .A18 2011 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 4 | Available (Restricted Access) | 0000002514 |
.
Includes index
pt. I. Setting the stage for mechanics of materials -- Predicting behavior with mechanics of materials -- Reviewing mathematics and units used in mechanics of materials -- Brushing up on statics basics -- Calculating properties of geometric areas -- Computing moments of area and other inertia calculations -- pt. II. Analyzing stress -- Remain calm, it's only stress! -- More than meets the eye: transforming stresses -- Lining up stress along axial axes -- Bending stress is only normal: analyzing bending members -- Shear madness: surveying shear stress -- Twisting the night away with torsion -- pt. III. Investigating strain -- Don't strain yourself: exploring strain and deformation -- Applying transformation concepts to strain -- Correlating stresses and strains to understand deformation -- pt. IV. Applying stress and strain -- Calculating combined stresses -- When push comes to shove: dealing with deformations -- Showing determination when dealing with indeterminate structures -- Buckling up for compression members -- Designing for required section properties -- Introducing energy methods -- pt. V. The part of tens -- Ten mechanics of materials pitfalls to avoid -- Ten tips to solving mechanics of materials problems.
Provides plain-English explanations of all the topics you'll encounter in a typical undergraduate course, including principles of equilibrium, geometric compatibility, and material behavior; stress and its relation to force and movement; strain and its relation to displacement; and methods for calculating deformations and indeterminate systems.
There are no comments on this title.