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Practicing engineers designing civil engineering structures, and advanced students of civil engineering, require foundational knowledge and advanced analytical and empirical tools. Mechanics in Civil Engineering Structures presents the material needed by practicing engineers engaged in the design of civil engineering structures, and students of civil engineering. The book covers the fundamental principles of mechanics needed to understand the responses of structures to different types of load and provides the analytical and empirical tools for design. The title presents the mechanics of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Practicing engineers designing civil engineering structures, and advanced students of civil engineering, require foundational knowledge and advanced analytical and empirical tools. Mechanics in Civil Engineering Structures presents the material needed by practicing engineers engaged in the design of civil engineering structures, and students of civil engineering. The book covers the fundamental principles of mechanics needed to understand the responses of structures to different types of load and provides the analytical and empirical tools for design. The title presents the mechanics of relevant structural elements-including columns, beams, frames, plates and shells-and the use of mechanical models for assessing design code application. Eleven chapters cover topics including stresses and strains; elastic beams and columns; inelastic and composite beams and columns; temperature and other kinematic loads; energy principles; stability and second-order effects for beams and columns; basics of vibration; indeterminate elastic-plastic structures; plates and shells. This book is an invaluable guide for civil engineers needing foundational background and advanced analytical and empirical tools for structural design.
Autorenporträt
László P. Kollár is Professor and vice-Head of the Department of Structural Engineering at Budapest University of Technology and Economics, in Hungary. He received his PhD and Habilitation from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, and his Doctor of Sciences from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He was elected to the Academy in 2007, and to the Academia European in 2012, and has been a Visiting Professor in the departments of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and of Civil Engineering, at Stanford University in the USA. He has published over 150 technical papers, as well as three books on the subject of structures, and has served widely as a consultant on the design of steel and reinforced concrete structures.

Gabriella Tarján is Assistant Professor in the Department of Structural Engineering at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, in Hungary. She received her PhD in structural engineering and also her master of education degree from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, and currently teaches courses on the analysis and design of structures.