Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Cartesian Tensor Analysis
- 2 Kinematics and Continuity Equation
- 3 Stress
- 4 Work, Energy, and Entropy Considerations
- 5 Material Models and Constitutive Equations
- 6 Finite Deformation of an Elastic Solid
- 7 Some Problems of Finite Elastic Deformation
- 8 Finite Deformation Thermoelasticity
- 9 Dissipative Media
- APPENDIX 1 Orthogonal Curvilinear Coordinate Systems
- APPENDIX 2 Physical Components of the Deformation Gradient Tensor
- APPENDIX 3 Legendre Transformation
- APPENDIX 4 Linear Vector Spaces
- Index
2 - Kinematics and Continuity Equation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Cartesian Tensor Analysis
- 2 Kinematics and Continuity Equation
- 3 Stress
- 4 Work, Energy, and Entropy Considerations
- 5 Material Models and Constitutive Equations
- 6 Finite Deformation of an Elastic Solid
- 7 Some Problems of Finite Elastic Deformation
- 8 Finite Deformation Thermoelasticity
- 9 Dissipative Media
- APPENDIX 1 Orthogonal Curvilinear Coordinate Systems
- APPENDIX 2 Physical Components of the Deformation Gradient Tensor
- APPENDIX 3 Legendre Transformation
- APPENDIX 4 Linear Vector Spaces
- Index
Summary
Description of Motion
In this chapter we are concerned with the motion of continuous bodies without reference to the forces producing the motion. A continuous body is a hypothetical concept and is a mathematical model for which molecular structure is disregarded and the distribution of matter is assumed to be continuous. Also it may be regarded as an infinite set of particles occupying a region of Euclidean point space E3 at a particular time t. The term particle is used to describe an infinitesimal part of the body, rather than a mass point as in Newtonian mechanics. A particle can be given a label, for example, X, and there is a one-one correspondence between the particles and triples of real numbers that are the coordinates at time with respect to a rectangular Cartesian coordinate system.
There are four common descriptions of the motion of a continuous body:
Material description. The independent variables are the particle X and the time t.
Referential description. The independent variables are the position vector X of a particle, in some reference configuration, and the time t. The reference configuration could be a configuration that the body never occupies but it is convenient to take it as the actual unstressed undeformed configuration at time t = 0. The term natural reference configuration is used to describe the unstressed undeformed configuration at a uniform reference temperature.
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- Elements of Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics , pp. 50 - 83Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009