Buch, Englisch, 395 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 605 g
ISBN: 978-1-4615-9076-7
Verlag: Springer
I have to thank a great many people for factual information, suggestions and for stimulating and sometimes heated discussions. Among the living, my colleagues at Reading University have been generous withhelp, notably Professor W. D. Biggs (Professor of Building Technology), Dr Richard Chaplin, Dr Giorgio Jeronimidis, Dr Julian Vincent and Dr Henry Blyth; Professor Anthony Flew, Professor of Philosophy, made useful suggestions about the last chapter. I am also grateful to Mr John Bartlett, Consultant Neurosurgeon at the Brook Hospital. Professor T. P. Hughes of the University of the West Indies has been helpful about rockets and many other things besides. My secretary, Mrs Jean Collins, was a great help in times of trouble. Mrs Nethercot of Vogue was kind to me about dressmaking. Mr Gerald Leach and also many of the editorial staff of Penguins have exercised their accustomed patience and helpfulness. Among the dead, l owe a great deal to Dr Mark Pryor - lately of Trinity College, Cambridge - especially for discussions about biomechanics which extended over a period of nearly thirty years. Lastly, for reasons which must surely be obvious, l owe a humble oblation to Herodotus, oncea citizen of Halicamassus.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
1 The structures in our lives — or how to communicate with engineers.- One The difficult birth of the science of elasticity.- 2 Why structures carry loads — or the springiness of solids.- 3 The invention of stress and strain — or Baron Cauchy and the decipherment of Young’s modulus.- 4 Designing for safety — or can you really trust strength calculations?.- 5 Strain energy and modem fracture mechanics — with a digression on bows, catapults and kangaroos.- Two Tension structures.- 6 Tension structures and pressure vessels — with some remarks on boilers, bats and Chinese junks.- 7 Joints, fastenings and people — also about creep and chariot wheels.- 8 Soft materials and living structures — or how to design a worm.- Three Compression and bending structures.- 9 Walls, arches and dams — or cloud-capp’d towers and the stability of masonry.- 10 Something about bridges — or Saint Bénezèt and Saint Isambard.- 11 The advantage of being a beam — with observations on roofs, trusses and masts.- 12 The mysteries of shear and torsion — or Polaris and the bias-cut nightie.- 13 The various ways of failing in compression — or sandwiches, skulls and Dr Euler.- Four And the consequence was….- 14 The philosophy of design — or the shape, the weight and the cost.- 15 A chapter of accidents — a study in sin, error and metal fatigue.- 16 Efficiency and aesthetics — or the world we have to live in.- Appendix 1 Handbooks and formulae.- Appendix 2 Beam theory.- Appendix 3 Torsion.- Appendix 4 The efficiency of columns and panels under compression loads.- Suggestions for further study.




