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020 _a70044384
040 _cNULRC
050 _aTA 350 .B44 1984
100 _aBeer, Ferdinand P.
_eauthor
245 0 _aVector mechanics for engineers :
_bstatics and dynamics /
_cFerdinand P. Beer and E. Russell Johnston, Jr.
250 _aFourth edition.
260 _aNew York :
_bMcGraw Hill Education,
_cc1984
300 _av, 926 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c24 cm.
504 _aIncludes index.
505 _aChapter One. Introduction -- Chapter Two. Statics of Particles -- Chapter Three. Rigid Bodies: Equivalent Systems of Forces -- Chapter Four. Equilibrium of Rigid Bodies -- Chapter Five. Distributed Forces: Centroids and Centers of Gravity -- Chapter Six. Analysis of Structures -- Chapter Seven. Forces in Beams and Cables -- Chapter Eight. Friction -- Chapter Nine. Distributed Forces: Moments of Inertia -- Chapter Ten. Method of Virtual Work -- Chapter Eleven -- Kinematics of Particles -- Chapter Twelve: Kinetics of Particles: Newton's Second Law -- Chapter Thirteen. Kinetics of Particles: Energy and Momentum Methods -- Chapter Fourteen. Systems of Particles -- Chapter Fifteen. Kinematics of Rigid Bodies -- Chapter Sixteen. Plane Motion of Rigid Bodies: Forces and Accelerations -- Chapter Seventeen. Plane Motion of Rigid Bodies: Energy and Momentum Methods -- Chapter Eighteen. Kinetics of Rigid Bodies in Three Dimensions-- Chapter Nineteen. Mechanical Vibrations.
520 _aThe main objective of a first course in mechanics should be develop in the engineering student the ability to analyze any problem in a simple and logical manner and to apply to its solution few, well-understood, basic principles.
650 _aMECHANICS, APPLIED
700 _aJohnston Jr., E. Russell
_eco-author
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c13099
_d13099