Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I KINEMATICS OF RECTILINEAR MOTION
- CHAPTER II DYNAMICS OF RECTILINEAR MOTION
- CHAPTER III TWO-DIMENSIONAL KINEMATICS
- CHAPTER IV DYNAMICS OF A PARTICLE IN TWO DIMENSIONS. CARTESIAN COORDINATES
- CHAPTER V TANGENTIAL AND NORMAL ACCELERATIONS. CONSTRAINED MOTION
- CHAPTER VI MOTION OF A PAIR OF PARTICLES
- CHAPTER VII DYNAMICS OF A SYSTEM OF PARTICLES
- CHAPTER VIII DYNAMICS OF RIGID BODIES. ROTATION ABOUT A FIXED AXIS
- CHAPTER IX DYNAMICS OF RIGID BODIES (CONTINUED). MOTION IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- CHAPTER X LAW OF GRAVITATION
- CHAPTER XI CENTRAL FORCES
- CHAPTER XII DISSIPATIVE FORCES
- CHAPTER XIII SYSTEMS OF TWO DEGRESS OF FREEDOM
- APPENDIX. NOTE ON DYNAMICAL PRINCIPLES
- INDEX
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I KINEMATICS OF RECTILINEAR MOTION
- CHAPTER II DYNAMICS OF RECTILINEAR MOTION
- CHAPTER III TWO-DIMENSIONAL KINEMATICS
- CHAPTER IV DYNAMICS OF A PARTICLE IN TWO DIMENSIONS. CARTESIAN COORDINATES
- CHAPTER V TANGENTIAL AND NORMAL ACCELERATIONS. CONSTRAINED MOTION
- CHAPTER VI MOTION OF A PAIR OF PARTICLES
- CHAPTER VII DYNAMICS OF A SYSTEM OF PARTICLES
- CHAPTER VIII DYNAMICS OF RIGID BODIES. ROTATION ABOUT A FIXED AXIS
- CHAPTER IX DYNAMICS OF RIGID BODIES (CONTINUED). MOTION IN TWO DIMENSIONS
- CHAPTER X LAW OF GRAVITATION
- CHAPTER XI CENTRAL FORCES
- CHAPTER XII DISSIPATIVE FORCES
- CHAPTER XIII SYSTEMS OF TWO DEGRESS OF FREEDOM
- APPENDIX. NOTE ON DYNAMICAL PRINCIPLES
- INDEX
Summary
This book is a sequel to a treatise on Statics published a little more than a year ago, and has a similar scope. To avoid repetitions, numerous references to the former volume are made.
A writer who undertakes to explain the elements of Dynamics has the choice, either to follow one or other of the traditional methods which, however effectual from a practical point of view, are open to criticism on logical grounds, or else to adopt a treatment so abstract that it is likely to bewilder rather than to assist the student who looks to learn something about the behaviour of actual bodies which he can see and handle. There is no doubt as to which is the proper course in a work like the present; and I have not hesitated to follow the method adopted by Maxwell, in his Matter and Motion, which forms, I think, the best elementary introduction to the ‘absolute’ system of Dynamics. Some account of the more abstract, if more logical, way of looking at dynamical questions is, however, given in its proper place, which is at the end, rather than at the beginning of the book.
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- Dynamics , pp. v - viPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1923