Exploring Engineering Chapter 2 Key elements in Engineering Analysis.
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Transcript of Exploring Engineering Chapter 2 Key elements in Engineering Analysis.
Exploring Engineering
Chapter 2Key elements in
Engineering Analysis
What we are going to learnMaybe the most important single lecture
in this course (which you should have already read ahead). Engineering is about units as well as
numbers. How to deal with units and dimensions Newton’s 2nd law of motion
SI and Engineering English units “gc” and “g”
Significant figures
Units and dimensions
All engineers will have to understand this material irrespective of sub discipline Let’s start with my favorite superhero…it’s
Superman! Why is this relevant?
• Superman represents the many of the qualities that engineers must master: Consider his qualities…
1) Faster than a speeding bullet
2) More powerful than a mighty locomotive
3) Can leap tall buildings with a single bound
4) Keeps falling into kryptonite traps
Superman – Engineering Hero
• Superman embodies many engineering concepts!
Faster … speeding bullet velocity/speed*
More powerful … mighty locomotive power
Can leap …tall buildings force and energy
…kryptonite traps Information (or lack of it!)
* Yes! There is a difference. We will see later!
Superman – Engineering Hero
Superman – Engineering Hero
Suppose I asked you what is ? Pretty good answer is 3.14, or 3.142, or 3.141593
Suppose now I ask what is Superman’s speed? Is 800 an answer? No! Not unless we add something - i.e., 800 m/s The units, meters/second, really adds some new
information..had we said 800 inches/hr Superman would be called “Supermolasses”!
Variable Units Number
Velocity/speed
m/s (miles per hour - mph, furlongs per fortnight)
800 (1789, 4.81 x 106)
Power hp (kW) 2,000 (1491)
Energy N-m (ft lbf) 9.81 x 104 (72,300)
Informa-tion
Bits Need enough to dodge kryptonite!
Units and DimensionsDid you see that we converted from one set
of units to another as in m/s converted to furlongs/fortnight?
There is a “fail-safe” method of converting*. Example: What’s the volume of a 1 ft cube in m3
if 1 m = 3.28 ft (or 3.28 [ft/m])? V = 1 ft3, V = 1/3.283 [ft3][m/ft]3 = 0.028 m3
* In simple cases the free web program Convert.exe is pretty good too!
Units and Dimensions
What’s the acceleration of a rocket in mph/s if you know it in SI units, a = 55 m/s2? 1 mile = 1609 m [i.e., 1609 m/mile] & 1 hour
= 3,600 s [i.e 3600 s/hr]. a = 55 3600/1609[m/s2] [s/hr][mile/m] =
120 mph/s (to 2 significant* figures)
* … of which more later
Units and Dimensions In this course we will require the units to be
manipulated in square brackets […] in each problem. While easy to get the previous solutions without this
method, many engineering problems are much harder than this & need this apparently clumsy methodology.
Computerized unit conversions are available in free software on the Internet (for example at:
http://joshmadison.com/software/convert-for-windows)
More Conversion Examples:These use conversion factors you can
paste from Convert.exe800 m/s to mph
800 [m/s][3.28 ft/m][1/5280 miles/ft][3600 s/hr] 800 x 2.236 = 1790 [mph]
2,000 hp to kW 2,000 [hp][0.7457 kW/hp] = 1492 kW
9.81 x 104 N m to ft lbf 9.81 x 104 [N m][1/4.448 lbf/N][3.28 ft/m] 9.81 x 104 x 0.737 = 7.23 x 104 ft lbf
Newton’s 2nd Law and Units
What Newton discovered was not “may the force be with you”, nor “may the mass acceleration be with you” but that force is proportional to the acceleration that it produces on a given mass.
F mass acceleration
or F ma
Force, Weight, and Mass In high school you learned F = ma but
there’s more to it Newton said that force was proportional to mass
x acceleration (not equal to it) because the equation also defines force
So an undefined force is given by F ma and in some also undefined unit system F1 m1a1 (e.g., Force in units of wiggles, mass in carats and acceleration in furlongs/fortnight2)
Eliminate the proportionality,
maam
FF
am
ma
F
F
11
1
111
and
Force, Weight, and Mass The ratio (F1/m1a1) is arbitrary. Picking it
defines the unit of force. SI system: F1 1 Newton when m1 = 1 kg
and a1 = 1 m/s2
Then you can use F = ma English system: F1 1 lb force when m1 =
1 lb mass and a1 = 32.174 ft/s2
c 2
lbm×ft 32.174 g
lbf ×s
lbfandslbf
ftlbm174.32 Define
2c
c g
maFg
Example 1
What would the SI force on a body if its mass were 856 grams? Need: Force on a body of mass 856
g (= 0.856 kg) accelerated at 9.81 m/s2
Know: Newton’s Law of Motion, F = ma How: F in N, m in kg and a in m/s2. Solve: F = ma = 0.856 9.81 [kg] [m/s2 ]
= 8.397 = 8.40 N
Example 2What would the lbf force on a body if its
mass were 3.25 lb mass? Need: lbf on a body of 3.25 lbm accelerated
at 32.2 ft/s2
Know: Newton’s Law of Motion, F = ma/gc
How: gc = 32.2 lbm ft/lbf s2
Solve: F = ma/gc = 3.25 32.2 /32.2[lbm] [ft/s2 ][lbf s2]/[lbm ft] = 3.25 lbf
Weight is W = mg/gc – a special familiar force.
Example 3What would the lbf force on a body
located on the moon (g = 5.37 ft/s2) if its mass were 3.25 lbm? Know: Newton’s Law of Motion, F = ma/gc
How: gc = 32.2 lbm ft/lbf s2 unchanged
Solve: F = ma/gc = 3.25 5.37 /32.2[lbm] [ft/s2 ][lbf s2]/[lbm ft] = 0.542 lbf
Newton’s 2nd Law and Units It bears repeating: SI system is far
superior and simpler:2 provided m in kg and a in m/ sF ma
Example: How many N to accelerate 3.51 kg by 2.25 m/s2?
• Ans: F = 3.51 x 2.25 [kg][m/s2] = 7.88 N
Significant figuresArithmetic cannot improve the accuracy
of a result 10 meters, 10. meters, 10.0 meters and
10.00 meters are not identical 10 meters implies you have used a 10
meters scale; 10. meters implies you have used a 1 meter scale; 10.0 meters implies you have used a 0.1 meter scale and 10.00 meters implies you have used a 0.01 meter scale
Significant figuresThus 10/6 = 2 and not 1.66666667 etc.
as displayed in your calculator A significant figure is any one of the
digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 0. Note that zero is a significant figure except when it is used simply to fix the decimal point or to fill the places of unknown or discarded digits.
Significant figures1.23 has 3 sig. figs.4567 has 4 sig. figs.0.0123 has three sig. figs.12,300 has three sig.figs. (The trailing
zeroes are place holders only)1.23 x 103, 1.230 x 103, 1.2300 x 103
have 3, 4, and 5 sig. figs. respectively
Significant figures – example
Round off 123.456 − 123.0 123.456 has 6 sig. figs. 123.0 has 4 sig. figs. But 123.0 is the least precise of these
numbers with just 1 figure to right of decimal place
Thus 123.456 − 123.0 = 0.456 = 0.46 = 0.5 The moral: In this course you will be
graded on significant figures – read your text for all the relevant rules of round-off!
Summary
Engineering problems need precise mathematics
But not more precise than can be justified (see text, Chapter 1)
Units must be consistent […] method is very helpful in maintaining correct units
Newton’s 2nd law defines force and gives rise to different sets of units
In SI, force = ma and wt = mg In English units, force = ma/gc and wt = mg/gc
gc is a universal constant that defines force in lbf and g is merely the acceleration due to gravity on Earth
Significant Figures are important in engineeringcalculations.