The Finite Element Method Set || Invariants of second-order tensors
โ Scribed by ,
- Book ID
- 120799858
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 256 KB
- Edition
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 0750664312
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The sixth editions of these seminal books deliver the most up to date and comprehensive reference yet on the finite element method for all engineers and mathematicians. Renowned for their scope, range and authority, the new editions have been significantly developed in terms of both contents and scope. Each book is now complete in its own right and provides self-contained reference; used together they provide a formidable resource covering the theory and the application of the universally used FEM. Written by the leading professors in their fields, the three books cover the basis of the method, its application to solid mechanics and to fluid dynamics.
* This is THE classic finite element method set, by two the subject's leading authors
* FEM is a constantly developing subject, and any professional or student of engineering involved in understanding the computational modelling of physical systems will inevitably use the techniques in these books
* Fully up-to-date; ideal for teaching and reference
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This paper deals with the finite element displacement method for approximating isolated solutions of general quasilinear elliptic systems. Under minimal assumptions on the structure of the continuous problems it is shown that the discrete analogues also have locally unique solutions whi
The sixth editions of these seminal books deliver the most up to date and comprehensive reference yet on the finite element method for all engineers and mathematicians. Renowned for their scope, range and authority, the new editions have been significantly developed in terms of both contents and sco
In this paper the gradients of the principal invariants of an arbitrary second-order tensor are derived in a very concise way.
The particular cases of (2.2) needed here can be easily worked out directly; one needs only the derivatives of the trace, the square, and the cube of a tensor.