EBOOK - Mechanical Engineering Systems (Richard Gentle & Peter Edwards & Bill Bolton)


EBOOK - Hệ thống kỹ thuật cơ khí (Richard Gentle & Peter Edwards & Bill Bolton) - 320 Trang.

‘There is a time for all things: for shouting, for gentle speaking, for silence; for the washing of pots and the writing of books. Let now the pots go black, and set to work. It is hard to make a beginning, but it must be done’ – Oliver Heaviside, lectromagnetic Theory, Vol 3 (1912), Ch9,  ‘Waves from moving sources –Adagio. Andante. Allegro Moderato.’

Oliver Heaviside was one of the greatest engineers of all time, ranking alongside Faraday and Maxwell in his field. As can be seen from the above excerpt from a seminal work, he appreciated the need to communicate to a wider audience. He also offered the advice So be rigorous; that will cover a multitude of sins. And do not frown.’The series of books that this prefaces takes up Heaviside’s challenge but in a world which is quite different to that being experienced just a centuryago.

CONTENTS:

1 Introduction: the basis of engineering 1
1.1 Real engineering 1
1.2 Units 3
1.3 Units used in this book 5
2 Thermodynamics 7
2.1 Heat energy 7
2.2 Perfect gases, gas laws, gas processes 13
2.3 Work done and heat energy supplied 24
2.4 Internal combustion engines 33
2.5 The steady flow energy equation 54
2.6 Steam 66
2.7 Refrigeration 89
2.8 Heat transfer 101
3 Fluid mechanics 112
3.1 Hydrostatics –fluids at rest 113
3.2 Hydrodynamics –fluids in motion 135
4 Dynamics 169
4.1 Introduction to kinematics 170
4.2 Dynamics –analysis of motion due to forces 183
5 Statics 204
5.1 Equilibrium 205
5.2 Structures 222
5.3 Stress and strain 235
5.4 Beams 249
5.5 Cables 275
5.6 Friction 282
5.7 Virtual work 287
5.8 Case study: bridging gaps 292
Solutions to problems 295
Index 307


EBOOK - Hệ thống kỹ thuật cơ khí (Richard Gentle & Peter Edwards & Bill Bolton) - 320 Trang.

‘There is a time for all things: for shouting, for gentle speaking, for silence; for the washing of pots and the writing of books. Let now the pots go black, and set to work. It is hard to make a beginning, but it must be done’ – Oliver Heaviside, lectromagnetic Theory, Vol 3 (1912), Ch9,  ‘Waves from moving sources –Adagio. Andante. Allegro Moderato.’

Oliver Heaviside was one of the greatest engineers of all time, ranking alongside Faraday and Maxwell in his field. As can be seen from the above excerpt from a seminal work, he appreciated the need to communicate to a wider audience. He also offered the advice So be rigorous; that will cover a multitude of sins. And do not frown.’The series of books that this prefaces takes up Heaviside’s challenge but in a world which is quite different to that being experienced just a centuryago.

CONTENTS:

1 Introduction: the basis of engineering 1
1.1 Real engineering 1
1.2 Units 3
1.3 Units used in this book 5
2 Thermodynamics 7
2.1 Heat energy 7
2.2 Perfect gases, gas laws, gas processes 13
2.3 Work done and heat energy supplied 24
2.4 Internal combustion engines 33
2.5 The steady flow energy equation 54
2.6 Steam 66
2.7 Refrigeration 89
2.8 Heat transfer 101
3 Fluid mechanics 112
3.1 Hydrostatics –fluids at rest 113
3.2 Hydrodynamics –fluids in motion 135
4 Dynamics 169
4.1 Introduction to kinematics 170
4.2 Dynamics –analysis of motion due to forces 183
5 Statics 204
5.1 Equilibrium 205
5.2 Structures 222
5.3 Stress and strain 235
5.4 Beams 249
5.5 Cables 275
5.6 Friction 282
5.7 Virtual work 287
5.8 Case study: bridging gaps 292
Solutions to problems 295
Index 307

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