PHYSICAL AND PLASTICITY CHARACTERISTICS EXPERIMENTS #1 - 5 CE 3143 October 7‚ 2003 Group A David Bennett 0 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Experiment # 1: Determination of Water Content (August 26‚ 2003) pp. 1-3 2. Experiment # 2: Determination of Specific Gravity of Soil (Sept. 2‚ 2003) pp. 4-7 3. Experiment # 3: Grain Size Analysis: Sieve Analysis (Sept. 9‚ 2003) pp. 8-12 4. Experiment # 4: Grain Size Analysis: Hydrometer Analysis (Sept. 16‚ 2003) pp. 13-18 5.
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Soil Mechanics: Subsurface Exploration Course No: G08-001 Credit: 8 PDH Yun Zhou‚ PhD‚ PE Continuing Education and Development‚ Inc. 9 Greyridge Farm Court Stony Point‚ NY 10980 P: (877) 322-5800 F: (877) 322-4774 info@cedengineering.com U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration Publication No. FHWA NHI-06-088 December 2006 NHI Course No. 132012_______________________________ SOILS AND FOUNDATIONS Reference Manual – Volume I Testing Theory Experience
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Soil Fundamentals CONTENTS Part 1 Soil Mechanics What Is Soil? ...................................................................page 1 Soil Groups .....................................................................page 1 Grain Size Limits.............................................................page 2 Soil Properties and Characteristics...................................page 2 Soil Analysis ....................................................................page 7 Moisture Content....
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Chapter Objectives Understand how to measure the stress and strain through experiments Correlate the behavior of some engineering materials to the stress-strain diagram. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd In-class Activities 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Reading Quiz Applications Stress-Strain diagram Strength parameters Poisson’s ratio Shear Stress-strain diagram Concept Quiz Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd TENSION AND COMPRESSION TEST Copyright
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Chapter Objectives To determine the deformation of axially loaded members. To determine the support reactions when these reactions cannot be determined solely from the equations of equilibrium. To analyze the effects of thermal stresses. Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education South Asia Pte Ltd In-class Activities 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Reading Quiz Applications Elastic deformation in axially loaded member Principle of superposition Compatibility conditions ‘Force method’ of analysis
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ME 2307 – DYNAMICS LABORATORY Class : V Semester Mechanical Sections : A & B LIST OF EXPERIMENTS 1. Free Transverse Vibration – I – Determination of Natural Frequency 2. Cam Analysis – Cam Profile and Jump-speed Characteristics 3. Free Transverse Vibration – II – Determination of Natural Frequency 4. Free Vibration of Spring Mass System – Determination of Natural Frequency 5. Compound Pendulum – Determination of Radius of Gyration and Moment of Inertia 6. Bifilar Suspension – Determination
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EXERCISE 1 1. Write the following as full (decimal) numbers in SI units: (a) 286.6 mm‚ (b)85 V (c) 760 mg‚ (d) 60.0 ps‚ (e) 22.5 fm‚ (f) 2.50 GV. 2. A typical adult human lung contains about 300 million tiny cavities called alveoli. Assume that the alveoli are spherical‚ and that the volume of a typical human lung is about 2 liters‚ estimate the average diameter of a single alveolus. 3. Two vectors have length and What are the maximum and minimum magnitudes of their vector sum? 4. is a vector
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CBE 6333‚ R. Levicky 1 Potential Flow Part I. Theoretical Background. Potential Flow. Potential flow is frictionless‚ irrotational flow. Even though all real fluids are viscous to some degree‚ if the effects of viscosity are sufficiently small then the accompanying frictional effects may be negligible. Viscous effects become negligible‚ for example‚ for flows at high Reynolds number that are dominated by convective transport of momentum. Thus potential flow is often useful for analyzing external
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Mechanics of Respiration Angelica D. Francisco‚ MD‚ MSc Edited to Word Format by: GASES KINETIC THEORY OF GASES o MOLECULES IN CONSTANT MOTION > TEMPERATURE > PRESSURE > VOLUME AVOGADRO’S LAW: V n CHARLES’ LAW: V=kT THE VOLUME OF A GAS IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE TEMPERATURE V = kT‚ P is constant IDEAL GAS EQUATION V = kn‚ T and P are constant EQUAL VOLUMES OF GASES‚ CONTAIN EQUAL NUMBER OF MOLECULES. PV= nRT P‚ PRESSURE V‚ VOLUME OF GAS n‚ NUMBER OF MOLECULES OF GAS R‚ GAS CONSTANT T‚ TEMPERATURE
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Jennifer Ingrum 02/01/11 The Central Nervous System or (CNS) is located in the center portion of the body as its name implies. The (CNS) is made up of the brain and the spinal cord. Our brain is in control of many very important body functions and sensations like these for example: sleep‚ muscle movement‚ memory‚ sexual activity‚ emotions‚ hunger and thirst. Our spinal cord extends several types of nerve fibers from the brain acts like a switching and relay terminal for the peripheral nervous
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