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Discrete mechanics : concepts and applications / Jean-Paul Caltagirone.

By: Caltagirone, Jean-Paul [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Fluid mechanics series: Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley and Sons, Inc. : Wiley-ISTE, [2019]Description: 1 online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781119575146; 1119575141; 9781119482826; 1119482828.Subject(s): Mechanics, Analytic | Nonlinear mechanics | Fluid mechanics | SCIENCE -- Mechanics -- General | SCIENCE -- Mechanics -- Solids | Fluid mechanics | Mechanics, Analytic | Nonlinear mechanicsGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Discrete mechanics.DDC classification: 531.0151 Online resources: Wiley Online Library
Contents:
Fundamental Principles of Discrete Mechanics -- Conservation of Acceleration -- Conservation of Mass, Flux and Energy -- Properties of the Discrete Formulation -- Two-Phase Flows, Capillarity and Wetting -- Stresses and Strains in Solids -- Multiphysical Extensions.
Summary: The discrete vision of mechanics is based on the founding ideas of Galileo and the principles of relativity and equivalence, which postulate the equality between gravitational mass and inertial mass. To these principles are added the Hodge-Helmholtz decomposition, the principle of accumulation of constraints and the hypothesis of the duality of physical actions. These principles make it possible to establish the equation of motion based on the conservation of acceleration considered as an absolute quantity in a local frame of reference, in the form of a sum of the gradient of the scalar potential and the curl of the vector potential. These potentials, which represent the constraints of compression and rotation, are updated from the discrete operators. Discrete Mechanics: Concepts and Applications shows that this equation of discrete motion is representative of the compressible or incompressible flows of viscous or perfect fluids, the state of stress in an elastic solid or complex fluid and the propagation of nonlinear waves.
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Fundamental Principles of Discrete Mechanics -- Conservation of Acceleration -- Conservation of Mass, Flux and Energy -- Properties of the Discrete Formulation -- Two-Phase Flows, Capillarity and Wetting -- Stresses and Strains in Solids -- Multiphysical Extensions.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The discrete vision of mechanics is based on the founding ideas of Galileo and the principles of relativity and equivalence, which postulate the equality between gravitational mass and inertial mass. To these principles are added the Hodge-Helmholtz decomposition, the principle of accumulation of constraints and the hypothesis of the duality of physical actions. These principles make it possible to establish the equation of motion based on the conservation of acceleration considered as an absolute quantity in a local frame of reference, in the form of a sum of the gradient of the scalar potential and the curl of the vector potential. These potentials, which represent the constraints of compression and rotation, are updated from the discrete operators. Discrete Mechanics: Concepts and Applications shows that this equation of discrete motion is representative of the compressible or incompressible flows of viscous or perfect fluids, the state of stress in an elastic solid or complex fluid and the propagation of nonlinear waves.

Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 19, 2019).

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