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Introduction to Solid Mechanics - by Jacob Lubliner & Panayiotis Papadopoulos (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Introduction to Solid Mechanics: An Integrated Approach presents for the first time in one text the concepts and processes covered in statics and mechanics of materials curricula following a granular, topically integrated approach.
- About the Author: Jacob Lubliner is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at UC Berkeley.
- 519 Pages
- Technology, Mechanical
Description
About the Book
Following a granular, topically integrated approach, this book methodically combines the essentials of rigid-body statics and deformable body mechanics of materials into a single, comprehensive text, which illustrates the relationship of concepts throughout.
Book Synopsis
Introduction to Solid Mechanics: An Integrated Approach presents for the first time in one text the concepts and processes covered in statics and mechanics of materials curricula following a granular, topically integrated approach. Since the turn of the millennium, it has become common in engineering schools to combine the traditional undergraduate offerings in rigid-body statics (usually called "statics") and deformable body mechanics (known traditionally as "strength of materials" or, more recently, "mechanics of materials") into a single, introductory course in solid mechanics. Many textbooks for the new course sequentially meld pieces of existing, discrete books--sometimes, but not always, acknowledging the origin--into two halves covering Statics and Mechanics of Materials. In this volume, Professors Lubliner and Papadopoulos methodically combine the essentials of statics and mechanics of materials, illustrating the relationship of concepts throughout, into one "integrated" text. Introduction to Solid Mechanics: An Integrated Perspective offers a holistic treatment of the depth and breadth of solid mechanics, proceeding from first principles to applications.From the Back Cover
This textbook presents for the first time in one text the concepts and processes covered in statics and mechanics of materials curricula following a systematic, topically integrated approach. Since the turn of the millennium, it has become common in engineering schools to combine the traditional undergraduate offerings in rigid-body statics (usually called "statics") and deformable body mechanics (known traditionally as "strength of materials" or, more recently, "mechanics of materials") into a single, introductory course in solid mechanics. Many textbooks for the new course sequentially meld pieces of existing, discrete books--sometimes, but not always, acknowledging the origin--into two halves covering Statics and Mechanics of Materials. In this volume, Professors Lubliner and Papadopoulos methodically combine the essentials of statics and mechanics of materials, illustrating the relationship of concepts throughout, into one "integrated" text.
This book also:
- Offers thorough presentation of fundamentals of the mechanics of deformable solids with concepts developed to their three-dimensional aspect
- Features section devoted to "simple stress states," special cases in which stress can be determined by statics alone, and stress-based design is introduced as a consequence
- Discusses stress and strain transformations, including the determination of principal axes, fromboth the geometric and algebraic perspectives
- Discusses inelasticity and material failure, including descriptions of testing methods and comparisons of failure criteria, as well as structural collapse.
- Includes exercises and introductory overviews in each chapter
- Features over 350 illustrations
Introduction to Solid Mechanics: An Integrated Approach offers a holistic treatment of the depth and breadth of solid mechanics, proceeding from first principles to applications.
Review Quotes
From the book reviews:
"The book with its systematic and topically integrated approach from first principles to applications combines expertly the essentials of 'statics' and 'strength of materials' into a single valuable text, and could be recommended to engineering and science students and to teachers." (M. Cengiz Dökmeci, zbMATH, Vol. 1288, 2014)
About the Author
Jacob Lubliner is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at UC Berkeley. Panos Papadopoulos is Professor of Mechanical Engineering at UC Berkeley.