Showing posts with label Dynamics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dynamics. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Introduction to Dynamics (repost)




Friedrich Pfeiffer, "Introduction to Dynamics"


English | 2015 | ISBN-10: 3662467208 | 214 pages | pdf | 2 MB




This concise textbook for students preferably of a postgraduate level, but also for engineers in practice, contains the basic kinematical and kinetic structures of dynamics together with carefully selected applications. The book is a condensed introduction to the fundamental laws of kinematics and kinetics, on the most important principles of mechanics and presents the equations of motion in the form of Lagrange and Newton-Euler. Selected problems of linear and nonlinear dynamics are treated, as well as problems of vibration formation. The presented selection of topics gives a useful basis for stepping into more advanced problems of dynamics. The contents of this book represent the result of a regularly revised course, which has been and still is given for masters students at the Technische Universität München.








Friday, September 4, 2015

The Origin and Dynamics of Solar Magnetism by M.J. Thompson [Repost]




The Origin and Dynamics of Solar Magnetism by M.J. Thompson


English | 22 May 2009 | ISBN: 1441902384 | 424 Pages | PDF | 23 MB




The book treats all aspects of solar magnetism, from its origin in the solar dynamo to its evolution annd dynamics that create the variability of solar phenomena, from its well-known 11-year activity cycle to the ever-changing pattern of sunspots and active regions on the Sun. Several contributions deal with the solar dynamo, the driver of many solar phenomena. Other contributions treat the transport and emergence of the magnetic flux through the outer layers of the Sun.