no
The normal strain is a deformation caused by normal forces such as Tension or Compression that act perpendicular to the cross-sectional area, while the shear strain is a deformation obtained from forces acting parallel or tangential to the cross-sectional area.
Young's modulus and elastic modulus are often used interchangeably, but there is a subtle difference between the two. Young's modulus specifically refers to the ratio of stress to strain in the elastic region of a material's stress-strain curve, while elastic modulus is a more general term that can refer to any modulus of elasticity that describes a material's ability to deform elastically under stress.
I think torsional strain happens only when two groups are eclipsed in relation to their positions to each other. This strain can be relieved by rotation about the carbon carbon bond. But steric strain can happen all the time. (when two groups are eclipsed, gauge or staggered in relation to each other.)
Strain gage and Extensometer both are same purpose to check the stress and strain in selective test pieces, but traditional they were using strain gage its take the preparation time is high and Extensometer we are check the directly both results are same.
According to Hooke's Law, the relationship between stress and strain is linear. This means that the amount of stress applied to a material is directly proportional to the resulting strain it experiences. In other words, as stress increases, strain also increases in a predictable and proportional manner.
there is no difference
difference between Strain-stress diagram of copper and steel?
Strain is the measure of length change per unit length. Elongation usually refers to strain under load at failure point.
A strain is damage to a muscle. It can be as little as a 'pull' or as bad as a tear in the fabric of the muscle.
Strain gage and Extensometer both are same purpose to check the stress and strain in selective test pieces, but traditional they were using strain gage its take the preparation time is high and Extensometer we are check the directly both results are same.
strain
A sprain is an injury in which a muscle is overstretched or torn. Tendinitis is an injury that occurs when a tendon becomes inflamed or torn. That's the difference between a muscle sprain and tendinitis.
An old strain of DNA refers to the original sequence of genetic code, while a new strain refers to a mutated or altered version of the DNA. Mutations in the DNA sequence can lead to differences in characteristics or functions of an organism.
Strain aging could be described as " normal wear and tear " or the fatigue that is experienced under normal conditions, whereas Dynamic strain would be an out of the normal range stress condition like a one time over stress condition where the sum of much strain aging is experienced in one " dynamic" occurrence.
A strain is an overstretched or "pulled" or torn muscle. a sprain is an overstretched or torn ligament (holds bones together at a joint), and a fracture is a crack, chip, break or crush of a bone.
The essential difference is that the bonded strain gauges are bonded on to the specimen whose strain is being measured whereas the unbonded strain gauges are not bonded on to the specimen. As the bonded strain gauges are well bonded on to the specimen, the entire strain being experienced by the specimen is transferred to the strain gauge. However, the bonded strain gauges are affected by temperature changes and also due to transverse strains.For transverse strains and ambient temperature compensations, suitable circuits for compensation can be used using Wheatstone's bridge. The unbonded strain gauges cannot transfer the strain of the specimen to the strain gauge and hence it is used mainly for displacement, or pressure or force transducers. It is least affected by transverse strain and temperature compensation of unbonded gauges cis automatically eliminated using Wheatstone's bridge.
NO, You misunderstand the definitions. A sprain affects a joint and a strain affects a muscle E.G. I sprained my ankle and strained my calf. NO, You misunderstand the definitions. A sprain affects a joint and a strain affects a muscle E.G. I sprained my ankle and strained my calf.