Chapter - 1A - Engineering Mechanics
Chapter - 1A - Engineering Mechanics
3003
UME2202
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
OBJECTIVES:
• To develop capacity to predict the effect of force and motion in the course of
carrying out the design functions of engineering.
OUTCOMES:
CO1: Illustrate the vectoral and scalar representation of forces and
moments (BL: L3)
CO2: Analyze the rigid body in equilibrium (BL: L3)
CO3: Evaluate the properties of surfaces and solids (BL: L3)
CO4: Calculate dynamic forces exerted in rigid body (BL: L3)
CO5: Determine the friction and the effects by the laws of friction (BL: L3)
UNIT I 9 UNIT II 9
STATICS OF PARTICLES EQUILIBRIUM OF RIGID
BODIES
Introduction – Units and Dimensions – Free body diagram – Types of
Laws of Mechanics – Lami’s theorem, supports –Action and reaction forces
Parallelogram and triangular Law of –stable equilibrium – Moments and
forces – Vectorial representation of Couples – Moment of a force about a
forces – Vector operations of forces - point and about an axis – Vectorial
additions, subtraction, dot product, representation of moments and
cross product – Coplanar Forces – couples – Scalar components of a
rectangular components – Equilibrium moment – Varignon’s theorem –
of a particle – Forces in space – Single equivalent force - Equilibrium
Equilibrium of a particle in space – of Rigid bodies in two dimensions –
Equivalent systems of forces – Principle
Equilibrium of Rigid bodies in three
of transmissibility
dimensions
UNIT III 9
UNIT IV 9
PROPERTIES OF
SURFACES AND SOLIDS DYNAMICS OF PARTICLES
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Beer, F.P and Johnston Jr. E.R., “Vector Mechanics for Engineers (In SI Units): Statics and
Dynamics”, 8th Edition, Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing company, New Delhi (2004).
2. Vela Murali, “Engineering Mechanics”, Oxford University Press (2010)
REFERENCES:
1. Bhavikatti, S.S and Rajashekarappa, K.G., “Engineering Mechanics”, New Age International (P)
Limited Publishers, 1998.
2. Hibbeller, R.C and Ashok Gupta, “Engineering Mechanics: Statics and Dynamics”, 11th Edition,
Pearson Education 2010.
3. Irving H. Shames and Krishna Mohana Rao. G., “Engineering Mechanics – Statics and Dynamics”,
4th Edition, Pearson Education 2006.
4. Meriam J.L. and Kraige L.G., “ Engineering Mechanics- Statics - Volume 1, Dynamics- Volume 2”,
Third Edition, John Wiley & Sons,1993.
5. Rajasekaran S and Sankarasubramanian G., “Engineering Mechanics Statics and Dynamics”, 3rd
Edition, Vikas Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., 2005.
UNIT I 9
STATICS OF PARTICLES
Statics:
Equilibrium of bodies
Statics (no accelerated
motion) under action
-Equilibrium Dynamics of Forces
-Selected Topics
Kinematics Kinetics
-Particles -Particles
-Rigid Bodies - Rigid Bodies
Basic Concepts
Mechanics
Statics
Structures
Dynamics
Automotives
Mech of Materials
Robotics
Fluid Mechanics Mechanics
Spacecrafts
Vibration
MEMs
Fracture Mechanics
Etc.
Etc.
HISTORY
• Archimedes (287-212 BC) developed the concept of buoyancy
forces; Principles of Lever and Buoyancy
• Kepler (1571-1630) established the fundamentals of astronomy
for planetary motion; named after him
• Newton (1642-1727) established laws of mechanics applicable to
solids; named after him
– Mechanics developed by him is called Newtonian mechanics
• Bernoulli (1667-1748) developed principle of virtual work,
applied in fluid mechanics as Bernoulli’s equation for total energy
at any point in a fluid flow
• D’Alembert (1717-1783) established a very important principle
for a dynamic system to be brought to equilibrium
FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS
• Space - associated with the notion of the position of a point P given in
terms of three coordinates measured from a reference point or origin.
• Time - definition of an event requires specification of the time and position at which it
occurred.
• Mass - used to characterize and compare bodies, e.g., response to earth’s gravitational
attraction and resistance to changes in translational motion.
• Force - represents the action of one body on another. A force is characterized by its
point of application, magnitude, and direction, i.e., a force is a vector quantity.
Basic Quantities
• Length, Mass, Time, Force
Units of Measurement
• m, kg, s, N… (SI, Int. System of Units)
- Dimensional Homogeneity
- Significant Figures
SYSTEMS OF UNITS
• International System of Units (SI):
The basic units are length, time, and mass
which are arbitrarily defined as the meter
• Kinetic Units: length, time, mass, and (m), second (s), and kilogram (kg). Force is
the derived unit,
force.
F ma
• Three of the kinetic units, referred to as m
basic units, may be defined arbitrarily.
1 N 1 kg 1 2
The fourth unit, referred to as a derived s
unit, must have a definition compatible • U.S. Customary Units:
with Newton’s 2nd Law, The basic units are length, time, and force
which are arbitrarily defined as the foot
(ft), second (s), and pound (lb). Mass is
the derived unit,
F ma
F
m
a
1 lb
1slug
1 ft s
Units of Measurement
•Summary of the four fundamental quantities in
the two system
US Units SI Units
Quantity
Symbol Unit Symbol Unit
Magnitude: Vector :
| V | or V V or V
: Direction
Physical Quantity of Vector
Vectors representing physical quantities can be classified
• Fixed Vector
– Its action is associated with a unique point of application
• Sliding Vector
– Has a unique line of action in space but not a unique
point of application
– Described by magnitude, direction & line of action
• Free Vector
– Its action is not confined or associated with a unique line
in space.
– Described by magnitude & direction
Vector’s Point of Application
F effect
The external
F F consequence
Internal
Effect –
F ? of these two
stress
= forces will be
the same if ….
- Rigid Body
F F If we concerns only about the
? external resultant effects on rigid body.
=
The two force can be
We can slide the force along its line
considered equivalent if
of action.
…… (force can be considered as sliding vector)
The two vectors V1 and V2, treated as free vectors, can be replaced by their equivalent V,
which is the diagonal of the parallelogram formed by V1 and V2 as its two sides.
V2 V
V2 V
V2
V1 V1
V1
V V1 V2 (generally V V1 V2 )
Note: If they are not free vectors, you can sum them if and only if they have
the same point of the application.
Scalar & Vector
Manipulation
Vector: magnitude & direction, components
– Scalar multiplication
aA
– Addition, subtraction
– Dot product
A B, A B
– Cross product AB
– Mixed triple product
AB
A (B C )
Mathematical Meanings
vs
Physical Meanings
29
SCALAR & VECTOR PRODUCT
VECTOR REPRESENTATION OF FORCE
VECTOR REPRESENTATION OF MOMENT
QUIZ 1
• 1a. Differentiate bet particle and rigid body.
• 1b. What are the assumptions made for a
body to be considered as rigid?
• 2a. Newton’s first law.
• 2b. Newton’s law of gravitation.
• 3a. What is kinetics?
• 3b. What is dimensional homogeneity?
CONCEPTUALIZATION
• Continuum: The method of description of a body with its dimension or
position with respect to certain coordinate system and time
• Rigid body mechanics: deformation due to external forces is negligible as
compared to dimension/shape=> rigid body
– Static condition: system of forces and moments and its support reaction keeps
body in equilibrium
– Dynamic condition: system of ext forces and moments with its inertia forces and
inertia moments keeps body in equilibrium
– A system of non-concurrent forces, maybe coplanar or non-coplanar forces is
discussed
• Particle mechanics: Body idealized as particle when mass is concentrated at
its centroid
– Lines of action of system of forces including support reaction pass through centroid
– Forces have force effect and no moment effect
– A system of concurrent forces, maybe coplanar or non-coplanar forces is discussed
Particle
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
• Newton’s First Law: If the resultant force on a
particle is zero, the particle will remain at rest or
continue to move in a straight line.
First Law:
An object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends
to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction,
unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
F 0
NEWTON’S LAWS OF MOTION (2nd Law)
Second Law:
The acceleration of a particle is proportional to the vector sum of
forces acting on it, and is in the direction of this vector sum.
m a
F
F ma
NEWTON’S LAWS OF MOTION
Third Law:
The mutual forces of action and reaction between two
particles are equal in magnitude, opposite in direction, and
collinear. Forces always occur in pairs – equal and
opposite action-reaction force pairs.
F F F F
M GMm
F 2
r
F r
m
- M & m are particle masses
- G is the universal constant of gravitation,
6.673 x 10-11 m3/kg-s2
- r is the distance between the particles.
concurrent forces
F2 F1 F2
F1
non-concurrent
if there are sliding vectors
F2
F2 F1 F2
F1 F1
SOLUTION METHODS
• Problem Statement:
Includes given data, specification of what
is to be determined, and a figure
showing all quantities involved. • Solution Check:
• Free-Body Diagrams:
- Test for errors in reasoning by
Create separate diagrams for each of the verifying that the units of the
bodies involved with a clear indication of computed results are correct,
all forces acting on each body. - test for errors in computation
by substituting given data and
computed results into
• Fundamental Principles:
previously unused equations based on
The six fundamental principles are the six principles
applied to express the conditions of rest - always apply experience and
or motion of each body. The rules of physical intuition to assess whether
algebra are applied to solve the results seem “reasonable”.
equations for the unknown quantities.