No, by definition Hooke's law relates to linear elastic only; when outside the elastic region it does not apply.
Materials such as metals (e.g. steel, aluminum), rubber, and certain plastics typically obey Hooke's Law of elasticity within their linear elastic range. This means they exhibit a linear relationship between stress and strain when subjected to small deformations.
As you stretch a spring, the force it exerts increases in direct proportion to the amount of stretch. This relationship is described by Hooke's Law. If the spring is stretched beyond its elastic limit, it may permanently deform and no longer obey Hooke's Law.
Yes.
This is the method in which the structure is analyzed by elastic theory i.e. theory of simple bending in which materials obey the Hook's law.
The proportional limit of a spring is the point at which the relationship between the force applied to it and the extension of the spring becomes non-linear. Beyond the proportional limit, the spring will no longer obey Hooke's Law, which states that the extension of a spring is directly proportional to the force applied to it.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaIn mechanics and physics, Hooke's law of elasticity is an approximation that states that the extension of a spring is in direct proportion with the load applied to it. Many materials obey this law as long as the load does not exceed the material's elastic limit. Materials for which Hooke's law is a useful approximation are known as linear-elastic or "Hookean" materials. Hooke's law in simple terms says that strain is directly proportional to stress.Mathematically, Hooke's law states that
It ignored English laws and thought it was more important to "obey god rather than man."
The verb is merely, obey. I obey, you obey, he, she, it obeys. One may be obedient to someone, but one does not "obey to" someone.
Obey is already a verb. For example "to obey someone or something" is an action, therefore it is a verb.
Obey is a verb. Obey means "to do as told".Example:Soldiers should obey orders.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
There is dis obey the prefix here is dis because it comes right before obey. You can use Re obey because you can obey someone another time for the same thing maybe. But everybody knows that you can use dis obey and maybe re obey Onother person: Prefixes can be dis-obey