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The engineering community is increasingly interested in the concept of explosive action and the associated failure of structural elements. This book addresses these topics in an approachable and comprehensive way, covering the civilian, military, and infrastructure protection fields. Self-contained and concise, it presents formulas and methodology to determine dynamic response to shock loads. It also explores a range of mechanical and civil engineering applications. The text enables engineers to calculate what happens to structures and objects when pushed, pulled, or jerked, by giving formulas, solved problems, and illustrations.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The engineering community is increasingly interested in the concept of explosive action and the associated failure of structural elements. This book addresses these topics in an approachable and comprehensive way, covering the civilian, military, and infrastructure protection fields. Self-contained and concise, it presents formulas and methodology to determine dynamic response to shock loads. It also explores a range of mechanical and civil engineering applications. The text enables engineers to calculate what happens to structures and objects when pushed, pulled, or jerked, by giving formulas, solved problems, and illustrations.
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Autorenporträt
Dr. Gregory Szuladzi¿ski received his master's degree in mechanical engineering from Warsaw University of Technology in 1965 and his doctoral degree in structural mechanics from the University of Southern California in 1973. From 1966 to 1980, he worked in the United States in the fields of aerospace, nuclear engineering, and shipbuilding. He has done extensive work in computer simulations of seismic events and accidental dynamic conditions as related to the safety of nuclear plants and military hardware. From 1981 until the present time, he has been working in Australia in the fields of aerospace, railway, power, offshore, automotive, and process industries, as well as in rock mechanics, underground blasting, infrastructure protection, and military applications. He has a number of publications to his credit in the area of nonlinear mechanics. His first book on the subject, Dynamics of Structures and Machinery: Problems and Solutions, was published in 1982. Dr. Szuladzi¿ski has been involved with the finite-element method of simulation of structural problems since 1966. In 1978-1979, he worked as the principal analyst for Control Data in Los Angeles in support of fi nite-element analysis (FEA) codes. Since the early 1990s he has been working on computer simulations of such violent phenomena as rock breaking with the use of explosives, fragmentation of metallic objects, shock damage to buildings, structural collapse, fluid-structure interaction, blast protection, and aircraft impact protection. He has conducted a number of state of-the-art studies showing explicit fragmentations of structures and other objects. He is a fellow of the Institute of Engineers Australia, a member of its Structural and Mechanical College, a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and of the American Society of Civil Engineers.