Mechanics For Engineers: STATICS, 13ed General Principles
Mechanics For Engineers: STATICS, 13ed General Principles
Mechanics For Engineers: STATICS, 13ed General Principles
STATICS, 13ed
Chapter 1
General Principles
Chapter Objectives
1. Mechanics
2. Fundamental Concepts
3. Units of Measurement
4. The International System of Units
5. Numerical Calculations
6. General Procedure for Analysis
1.1 Mechanics
Mechanics
Mechanics of
Mechanics of Mechanics of
Deformable
Rigid-Body Fluid
Body
Basic Quantities
1. Length
- locate the position of a point in space
2. Mass
- measure of a quantity of matter
3. Time
- succession of events
4. Force
- a push or pull exerted by one body on another
1.2 Fundamentals Concepts
Idealizations
1. Particles
- has a mass but size can be neglected
2. Rigid Body
- a combination of a large number of particles in which
all the particles remain at fixed distance from another,
before and after applying loads.
3. Concentrated Force
- the effect of a loading whish is
assumed to act at point on a body.
1.2 Fundamentals Concepts
F ma
1.2 Fundamentals Concepts
mM e
Weight: W G 2
r
Letting g GM e / r yields W mg
2
1.3 Units of Measurement
SI Units
Stands for Systme International dUnits
F = ma is maintained only if 3 of the units, called base
units, are defined and the fourth unit is derived from
the equation
SI system specifies length in meters (m), time in
seconds (s) and mass in kilograms (kg)
Force unit, Newton (N), is derived from F = ma
1.3 Units of Measurement
Prefixes
For a very large or small numerical quantity, units can
be modified by using a prefix
Dimensional Homogeneity
Each term must be expressed in the same units
Regardless of how the equation is evaluated, it
maintains its dimensional homogeneity
All terms can be replaced by a consistent set of units
1.5 Numerical Calculations
Significant Figures
Accuracy of a number is specified by the number of
significant figures it contains
A significant figure is any digit including zero
e.g. 5604 and 34.52 have four significant numbers
When numbers begin or end with zero, we make use
of prefixes to clarify the number of significant figures
e.g. 400 as one significant figure would be 0.4(103)
1.5 Numerical Calculations
Calculations
Retain a greater number of digits for accuracy
Work out computations so that numbers that are
approximately equal
Round off final answers to three significant figures
1.6 General Procedure for Analysis
Solution
2 km 1000 m 1 h
2 km/h 0.556 m/s
h km 3600 s
Remember to round off the final answer to three significant figures.