Plasticity
I am teaching this course this semester. I'll post notes as I write them. Links to the notes are listed in this post. I will also notify updates on twitter: https://twitter.com/zhigangsuo
I am teaching this course this semester. I'll post notes as I write them. Links to the notes are listed in this post. I will also notify updates on twitter: https://twitter.com/zhigangsuo
This training course covers the ANSYS LS-DYNA Interface, which seamlessly links the ANSYTS traditional environment pre- and post-processing software with the LS-DYNA explicit solver to conduct highly nonlinear, transient dynamic analyses. Sequential solutions are also discussed, in which the ANSYS implicit solver is used in conjunction with the LS-DYNA explicit solver to extend the range of applications.
I have divided the old notes on temperature into three parts:
Our feeling of hotness comes from everyday experiences. These experiences indicate that many levels of hotness exist, and that all levels of hotness can be mapped to a real variable.
These notes are part of a graduate course on advanced elasticity.
For a system in thermal contact with the rest of the world, we have described three quantities: entropy, energy, and temperature. We have also described the idea of a constraint internal to the system, and associated this constraint to an internal variable.
Time: Tuesday and Thursday 2:00 - 3:30 pm
Place: ECJ 1.214, University of Texas at Austin
Instructor: Rui Huang, WRW 117D, (512) 471-7558, ruihuang [at] mail.utexas.edu (ruihuang[at]mail[dot]utexas[dot]edu)
Lecture notes (coming soon)
Homewrok sets (coming soon)
The lecture notes of the two courses I taught at Stanford University during the last two quarters, "ME 340 Elasticity" and "ME 334 Introduction to Statistical Mechanics", are available in PDF format online at:
http://micro.stanford.edu/~caiwei/me340/
http://micro.stanford.edu/~caiwei/me334/
Perhaps it could be useful to you.
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