Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Author: David Rubin

Publisher: Newnes

Published: 2012-12-02

Total Pages: 571

ISBN-13: 0080983871

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Continuum mechanics studies the response of materials to different loading conditions. The concept of tensors is introduced through the idea of linear transformation in a self-contained chapter, and the interrelation of direct notation, indicial notation and matrix operations is clearly presented. A wide range of idealized materials are considered through simple static and dynamic problems, and the book contains an abundance of illustrative examples and problems, many with solutions. Through the addition of more advanced material (solution of classical elasticity problems, constitutive equations for viscoelastic fluids, and finite deformation theory), this popular introduction to modern continuum mechanics has been fully revised to serve a dual purpose: for introductory courses in undergraduate engineering curricula, and for beginning graduate courses.


An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Author: J. N. Reddy

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2013-07-29

Total Pages: 479

ISBN-13: 1107025435

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This best-selling textbook presents the concepts of continuum mechanics, and the second edition includes additional explanations, examples and exercises.


An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

An Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Author: Morton E. Gurtin

Publisher: Academic Press

Published: 1982-01-12

Total Pages: 279

ISBN-13: 0080918492

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This book presents an introduction to the classical theories of continuum mechanics; in particular, to the theories of ideal, compressible, and viscous fluids, and to the linear and nonlinear theories of elasticity. These theories are important, not only because they are applicable to a majority of the problems in continuum mechanics arising in practice, but because they form a solid base upon which one can readily construct more complex theories of material behavior. Further, although attention is limited to the classical theories, the treatment is modern with a major emphasis on foundations and structure


Introduction to Continuum Mechanics for Engineers

Introduction to Continuum Mechanics for Engineers

Author: Ray M. Bowen

Publisher:

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780486474601

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This self-contained graduate-level text introduces classical continuum models within a modern framework. Its numerous exercises illustrate the governing principles, linearizations, and other approximations that constitute classical continuum models. Starting with an overview of one-dimensional continuum mechanics, the text advances to examinations of the kinematics of motion, the governing equations of balance, and the entropy inequality for a continuum. The main portion of the book involves models of material behavior and presents complete formulations of various general continuum models. The final chapter contains an introductory discussion of materials with internal state variables. Two substantial appendixes cover all of the mathematical background necessary to understand the text as well as results of representation theorems. Suitable for independent study, this volume features 280 exercises and 170 references.


Continuum Mechanics

Continuum Mechanics

Author: Fridtjov Irgens

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-01-10

Total Pages: 667

ISBN-13: 3540742980

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This book presents an introduction into the entire science of Continuum Mechanics in three parts. The presentation is modern and comprehensive. Its introduction into tensors is very gentle. The book contains many examples and exercises, and is intended for scientists, practitioners and students of mechanics.


Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Introduction to Continuum Mechanics

Author: Sudhakar Nair

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2009-03-16

Total Pages: 253

ISBN-13: 0521875625

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This textbook treats solids and fluids in a balanced manner, using thermodynamic restrictions on the relation between applied forces and material responses. This unified approach can be appreciated by engineers, physicists, and applied mathematicians with some background in engineering mechanics. It has many examples and about 150 exercises for students to practice. The higher mathematics needed for a complete understanding is provided in the early chapters. This subject is essential for engineers involved in experimental or numerical modeling of material behavior.


Continuum Mechanics

Continuum Mechanics

Author: A. J. M. Spencer

Publisher: Courier Corporation

Published: 2012-06-08

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 0486139476

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Undergraduate text offers an analysis of deformation and stress, covers laws of conservation of mass, momentum, and energy, and surveys the formulation of mechanical constitutive equations. 1992 edition.


Continuum Damage Mechanics

Continuum Damage Mechanics

Author: Sumio Murakami

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-02-24

Total Pages: 420

ISBN-13: 9400726651

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Recent developments in engineering and technology have brought about serious and enlarged demands for reliability, safety and economy in wide range of fields such as aeronautics, nuclear engineering, civil and structural engineering, automotive and production industry. This, in turn, has caused more interest in continuum damage mechanics and its engineering applications. This book aims to give a concise overview of the current state of damage mechanics, and then to show the fascinating possibility of this promising branch of mechanics, and to provide researchers, engineers and graduate students with an intelligible and self-contained textbook. The book consists of two parts and an appendix. Part I is concerned with the foundation of continuum damage mechanics. Basic concepts of material damage and the mechanical representation of damage state of various kinds are described in Chapters 1 and 2. In Chapters 3-5, irreversible thermodynamics, thermodynamic constitutive theory and its application to the modeling of the constitutive and the evolution equations of damaged materials are descried as a systematic basis for the subsequent development throughout the book. Part II describes the application of the fundamental theories developed in Part I to typical damage and fracture problems encountered in various fields of the current engineering. Important engineering aspects of elastic-plastic or ductile damage, their damage mechanics modeling and their further refinement are first discussed in Chapter 6. Chapters 7 and 8 are concerned with the modeling of fatigue, creep, creep-fatigue and their engineering application. Damage mechanics modeling of complicated crack closure behavior in elastic-brittle and composite materials are discussed in Chapters 9 and 10. In Chapter 11, applicability of the local approach to fracture by means of damage mechanics and finite element method, and the ensuing mathematical and numerical problems are briefly discussed. A proper understanding of the subject matter requires knowledge of tensor algebra and tensor calculus. At the end of this book, therefore, the foundations of tensor analysis are presented in the Appendix, especially for readers with insufficient mathematical background, but with keen interest in this exciting field of mechanics.


Continuum Mechanics and Linear Elasticity

Continuum Mechanics and Linear Elasticity

Author: Ciprian D. Coman

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-11-02

Total Pages: 528

ISBN-13: 9402417710

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This is an intermediate book for beginning postgraduate students and junior researchers, and offers up-to-date content on both continuum mechanics and elasticity. The material is self-contained and should provide readers sufficient working knowledge in both areas. Though the focus is primarily on vector and tensor calculus (the so-called coordinate-free approach), the more traditional index notation is used whenever it is deemed more sensible. With the increasing demand for continuum modeling in such diverse areas as mathematical biology and geology, it is imperative to have various approaches to continuum mechanics and elasticity. This book presents these subjects from an applied mathematics perspective. In particular, it extensively uses linear algebra and vector calculus to develop the fundamentals of both subjects in a way that requires minimal use of coordinates (so that beginning graduate students and junior researchers come to appreciate the power of the tensor notation).