Experimentally Determined Young's Modulus

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jdawg
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Homework Statement


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So in my mechanics of materials lab, we calculated Young's modulus after measuring the strain and applying force to a beam. What I'm trying to figure out is, why are you able to use both a bending force and an axial force when calculating Young's modulus?

Homework Equations


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Young's modulus = stress/strain

The Attempt at a Solution


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Is it because they both induce a normal force on the beam?

Thanks for any help!
 
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Sorry I forgot to include that, its a bending situation. We had a beam placed into a cantilever flexure frame and loaded weights on one end of the beam.
 
The stress and strain distribution for the cross section was assumed to be uniaxial, so does that mean in the lateral direction the stress and strain is zero?
 
We assumed them to be uniform.
 
jdawg said:
We assumed them to be uniform.
You need to go back and review beam bending. They are definitely not uniform. The variation of stress over the cross section is what causes the bending moment. Where over the cross section of the beam would your intuition tell you that the tensile stress (and strain) are highest? Lowest? Zero?