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ES 242r HW1 Q1

Submitted by Xuanhe Zhao on

I'm Xuanhe Zhao, a first year PhD student working in Suo's Group, at Harvard University. Prior to coming to Harvard, I obtained a Master Degree in Materials Engineering from University of British Columbia.

 

The courses I have taken in solid mechanics include Elasticity taught by Zhigang, Plasticity taught by Prof. J. Vlassak, and Solid Structure and Defect taught by Prof. F. Spaepen. Currently, I'm also in the class of Advanced Elasticity given by Zhigang.

My introduction to ES 242r

Submitted by J. Alberto Ortega on

My name is J. Alberto Ortega, and I am a PhD student in civil engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). My undergraduate education took place in Texas A&M University (I am a proud member of the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Class of 2002, WHOOP!), majoring in Structural Engineering. I recently obtained my Master of Science degree in Structures and Materials from MIT.

iMechanica and Citizendium - the perfect union?

Submitted by Hassan Aref on

Most visitors/users of iMehanica will be aware of Wikipedia. Well, there is a new project of this kind underway. To quote from its "mission statement":

The Citizendium (sit-ih-ZEN-dee-um), a "citizens' compendium of everything," is an experimental new wiki project. The project, started by a founder of Wikipedia, aims to improve on that model by adding “gentle expert oversight” and requiring contributors to use their real names.

HomeWork 1 Problem 1 Self Description

Submitted by Ashwani Kumar Goel on

    I am Ashwani Kumar Goel, currently pursuing my Ph.D. from Engineering Mechanics Department, University of Nebraska Lincoln. I am from India. I have taken my Bachelors degree in Mechanical Engineering from HBTI, Kanpur,India and my Masters degree in Applied Mechanics from IIT, Delhi, India. I have taken lots of courses related to solid mechanics starting from my undergraduation. I have taken strength of materials ,applied mechanics, mechanics of solids during my undergraduate degree and applied elasticity, theory of plasticity, theory of plates and shells, continuum mechanics, linear viscoelasticity during my graduate degree. The group I work in focuses on theoretical, computational and experimental methods for the modeling and analysis of materials and the simulation of their response. I have been part of this group for about two and half years and focusing on theoretical and computational methods to extract material characteristics from novel experimental methods and in the implementation of these characteristics into simulations.

Question 1: Personal Description - Adrian Podpirka

Submitted by Adrian Podpirka on

My name is Adrian Podpirka and I am a first year graduate student at Harvard studying Applied Physics. My undergraduate major was material science and engineering at Columbia University. Before taking fracture mechanics this semester I have taken Solid Mechanis (ES 240) with professor Suo.


Problem Set # 1- question # 1

Submitted by Emmeline on

Hi all,My name is Emmeline Lemos, I am a current Master student in Civil Engineering at University of Nebraska-Lincoln. I took my bachelor degree in Civil Engineering at my home country-Brazil. When I decided to leave my country and to come to graduate school,  I came with the great desire to learn more, and to try to absorb as much as possible from teachers, classmates and this new world that I'm surround by. Definitely, this desire to learn is one of my strengths and makes me overcome the challenges.  

As can be seen from my previous and current degree, most of my background is in Civil Engineering which give me not so much knowledge in Mechanics and been one of my weakness. But, Fracture Mechanics is not the first class that I’m taking in this field; I already took FEM and Continuum Mechanics.