The book Introduction to tensor calculus and continuum mechanics

masood_mahdi
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the book "Introduction to tensor calculus and continuum mechanics"

hi
please help me !
i've try to find appendix d of this or solution that excersise
anyone can help me ?
any link or full version of this book thart have "appendix d"
my english languge not good
sorry
thanks a lot
bye
 
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Welcome to PF!

Hi masood_mahdi! Welcome to PF! :smile:
masood_mahdi said:
hi
please help me !
i've try to find appendix d of this or solution that excersise
anyone can help me ?
any link or full version of this book thart have "appendix d"
my english languge not good
sorry
thanks a lot
bye

Sorry, but John H. Heinbockel's web-page at http://www.math.odu.edu/~jhh/counter2.html" clearly states that "Appendix D which contains solutions to 70% of the exercise problems" is not in the free version. :redface:

(and if you did find a copy somewhere, it would be a breach of copyright! :rolleyes:)​

Tell us what the problem is, show us the work you've done on it, and we'll see if we can help. :smile:
 
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Hi
thank you so much.
really?
my questions is in chapter 2 . it's 4 question that i need to your help .
give you my question's number to slove that for me ?

thanks again
 
Hi masood_mahdi!

Type out one of the questions (it's best not to put two questions in the same thread, unless they're very similar), show us what you've tried, and where you're stuck, and then we'll know how to help! :smile:
 


hi dear tiny-tim
my question mumber of this part d,e,f of question (26) page 31 "excersise 1.1"becasuse my question has script , i can't type that correctly 1.
i'm so sorry
do you have book?
if don't i give you address web page that download it .
thanks again
 
It's easiest if you type the question here for everyone to see immediately.

And you'll need to type what you've done, anyway! :smile:
 
There are two things I don't understand about this problem. First, when finding the nth root of a number, there should in theory be n solutions. However, the formula produces n+1 roots. Here is how. The first root is simply ##\left(r\right)^{\left(\frac{1}{n}\right)}##. Then you multiply this first root by n additional expressions given by the formula, as you go through k=0,1,...n-1. So you end up with n+1 roots, which cannot be correct. Let me illustrate what I mean. For this...
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