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Strength of Materials
Contributor(s): Hartog, J. P. Den (Author)
ISBN: 0486607550     ISBN-13: 9780486607559
Publisher: Dover Publications
OUR PRICE:   $23.75  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 1961
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: This full, clear treatment of basic material (tension, torsion, bending, etc.) also features advanced material on engineering methods and applications, in addition to  350 problems and answers.

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Technology & Engineering | Engineering (general)
- Technology & Engineering | Materials Science - General
- Science | Physics - General
Dewey: 620.1
Series: Dover Books on Physics
Physical Information: 0.7" H x 5.68" W x 7.8" (0.74 lbs) 352 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Among introductory texts on the strength of materials, this work is particularly distinguished. It was originally developed by Professor Den Hartog to meet the needs of engineering students at M.I.T. for a sound yet lucid first course in strength of materials. As such it has also enjoyed wide popularity in engineering schools throughout the world.
But the book was remarkable in a number of other ways, so that it has become one of the favorite refresher and reference works for engineers as well as a popular self-study text. Perhaps the chief reason for this is that in addition to all the customary elementary material on the subject (i.e., clear instructions to the fundamentals of tension, torsion, bending, compound stresses, deflection of beams, etc.) it also contains a considerable amount of more advanced material concerning methods of great practical value to working engineers which are not usually included in introductory texts. This material is presented in starred sections (which may be omitted on a first reading without interrupting the flow of the presentation) and includes a full treatment of the Mohr circle and its application to the determination of moments of inertia and strains as well as stresses; a lucid elementary presentation of the theory of the center of shear; and one of the few elementary presentations of the theory of the center of shear; and one of the few elementary discussions of the "Myosotis" method of calculating beam deflections, a method which often possesses considerable advantages over the more usual methods involving moment-area or the differential equation of bending.
Other material not usually found in elementary texts but which are frequently of great value to the practicing engineer are the discussions of the statically indeterminate truss, reinforced concrete, plastic deformations, thick-walled cylinders, thick curved bars, Maxwell's Reciprocal Theorem, and photoelasticity.
In all sections, both general principles and concrete applications are given. Another feature which readers have found unusually helpful is the 85-page section of 350 problems which gives the student practice in techniques and further illustrates applications. All problems are complete with answers.