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Analysis of Structures: An Introduction Including Numerical Methods

ISBN: 978-1-119-99327-8

August 2011

640 pages

Description
Analysis of Structures offers an original way of introducing engineering students to the subject of stress and deformation analysis of solid objects, and helps them become more familiar with how numerical methods such as the finite element method are used in industry.

Eisley and Waas secure for the reader a thorough understanding of the basic numerical skills and insight into interpreting the results these methods can generate.

Throughout the text, they include analytical development alongside the computational equivalent, providing the student with the understanding that is necessary to interpret and use the solutions that are obtained using software based on the finite element method. They then extend these methods to the analysis of solid and structural components that are used in modern aerospace, mechanical and civil engineering applications.

Analysis of Structures is accompanied by a book companion website www.wiley.com/go/waas housing exercises and examples that use modern software which generates color contour plots of deformation and internal stress.It offers invaluable guidance and understanding to senior level and graduate students studying courses in stress and deformation analysis as part of aerospace, mechanical and civil engineering degrees as well as to practicing engineers who want to re-train or re-engineer their set of analysis tools for contemporary stress and deformation analysis of solids and structures.

  •   Provides a fresh, practical perspective to the teaching of structural analysis using numerical methods for obtaining answers to real engineering applications
  • Proposes a new way of introducing students to the subject of stress and deformation analysis of solid objects that are used in a wide variety of contemporary engineering applications
  • Casts axial, torsional and bending deformations of thin walled objects in a framework that is closely amenable to the methods by which modern stress analysis software operates.
About the Author
Anthony M. Waas and Joe G. Eisley, University of Michigan, USA

Anthony Waas is Professor of Aerospace Engineering and Professor of Mechanical Engineering, and Director, Composite Structures Laboratory at the University of Michigan. His current research interests are damage tolerance analysis of composite materials and components made of composite materials, nanocomposites, structural engineering, biomaterials and bioengineering, and structures and mechanical components operating under "hot" conditions. A recipient of many awards for teaching and research excellence, Professor Waas is a Fellow of ASME and the AAM, and an Associate Fellow of AIAA and has served as an Associate Editor of the AIAA Journal (1995-02) and on the Editorial Advisory Board of the AIAA Journal of Aircraft (1995-00). He is currently on the editorial board of the Journal Composites: B and serves as an Associate Editor of the RAeS Aeronautical Journal, IJ of Engineering Science and Journal of Applied Mechanics, and is on the Editorial Board of Computer Modeling in Engineering and Sciences, and the Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Materials. He was the Technical Chair of the 49th AIAA SDM conference.

Joe G Eisley is Professor Emeritus - Aerospace Engineering in the College of Engineering at the University of Michigan. He is author of Mechanics of Elastic Structures.