Recent content by nanunath
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Undergrad A manometer measures mechanical or thermodynamic pressure?
Hi guys, I have two questions as follows, ofcourse they may seem too basic, I have read through certain texts (engineering) but I still haven't been able to actually physically understand, so asked here 1) Whats thermodynamic pressure w.r.t physical point of view? - for a gas from... -
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Continuum Mechanics Books - help
Continuum Mechanics Books - help please Hi all.. Im almost done with this course in the current semester .. just academically .. I really haven't ' felt ' this subject .. haven't truly understood it ..so I'm re reading it these vacations . I need a v good book .. please suggest the best...- nanunath
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- Books Continuum Continuum mechanics Mechanics
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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MATLAB Matlab=>Trignometric equations?
Hey thanks dear, Btw..I google searchd..and found 'fzero' function to be useful for my purpose..my program works fine now.. Bye!- nanunath
- Post #3
- Forum: MATLAB, Maple, Mathematica, LaTeX
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MATLAB Matlab=>Trignometric equations?
Hi..can anyone tell me / give me a link as to how are trigonometric equations solved using MATLAB..I searched the help .. but found none there.. Thanks- nanunath
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- Replies: 2
- Forum: MATLAB, Maple, Mathematica, LaTeX
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Engineering Mechanics: Get Your Top Book Recommendations Here!
hey thaks..but friend I was talikng of "Newtonian Mechanics" (in depth treatment)=> that engg mechanics- nanunath
- Post #6
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Engineering Mechanics: Get Your Top Book Recommendations Here!
ok...Thanks I want a good book for "Engineering Mechanics" the one which explains everything to damn detailed levels... Problems is not an issue..I want the subject matter(theory) to be great great details... Thats all..hope this was specific...if not please take the effort to tell...- nanunath
- Post #4
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Graduate 4th order Runge Kutta method for 2nd order ODE
Hello Cypeq, I don't get what u mean by "x2,n" But..what u say seems correct(I too just recently fell into this stuff) The thing "I think" u r looking for .. I try to tell my way as follows.. once u get the two 1st order ODE's...assign increment step with a variable like k with x1, l with x2 if...- nanunath
- Post #2
- Forum: Differential Equations
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Graduate Solving Blasius Equation with Fortran 77
Thanks gato and jackwell, But gato dear, I don't understand how you get the three more 1st order ODE's And what does "F ,alpha" actually mean..I haven't seen this notation before... I hope I was able to highlight what my problem is... Btw..I solved blausius equation using automatic...- nanunath
- Post #9
- Forum: Differential Equations
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Graduate Solving Blasius Equation with Fortran 77
Hello...can anyone make me clear what exactly and how the 'alpha' factor here helps in calculating the value of f''(0) for next iteration.. I also don't get how to solve this equation by making the marching process (f''(0)) automatically .. I know what Newton Raphson method is and used ..but not...- nanunath
- Post #6
- Forum: Differential Equations
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Engineering Mechanics: Get Your Top Book Recommendations Here!
hey...I don't see why does this happen to every thread of this kind...huh? Plz reply... :smile:- nanunath
- Post #2
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Engineering Mechanics: Get Your Top Book Recommendations Here!
Plz recommend me a very good book for Engineering Mechanics Plz..atleast reply guys..I know such question "generally" get no replies..I want "ur recommended best book=ur view"...not "the best book" Thanks for Visiting the thrd Bye- nanunath
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- Book Book recommendations Engineering Engineering mechanics Mechanics
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Property lines on the 2d projections
ohh.. Got the mistake...2day Really I don't believe I get confused to such extents..the above quoted lines r wrong- nanunath
- Post #8
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Property lines on the 2d projections
hi..I got another doubt..please help me with this friends, Enthalpy is defined as: h= u + p*v u-internal energy p-pressure (abs) v-specific volume Books say : "Enthalpy is a property as all the terms in the above expression are properties..." That is: dh = d [u + (p*v)] = du +...- nanunath
- Post #7
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Property lines on the 2d projections
That was a bad guess ..I discovered after I noted the critical temp and pressure of water... water could exist as a liquid...and a vapor at -40oC ...I suspect...(without referring to and actual co-ordinate axis labeled Phase diagram..to scale!- nanunath
- Post #6
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering
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Property lines on the 2d projections
Thanks so much..I'll check it out...- nanunath
- Post #5
- Forum: Mechanical Engineering