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- Shearing_(physics) abstract "Shearing in continuum mechanics refers to the occurrence of a shear strain, which is a deformation of a material substance in which parallel internal surfaces slide past one another. It is induced by a shear stress in the material. Shear strain is distinguished from volumetric strain, the change in a material's volume in response to stress.Often, the verb shearing refers more specifically to a mechanical process that causes a plastic shear strain in a material, rather than causing a merely elastic one. A plastic shear strain is a continuous (non-fracturing) deformation that is irreversible, such that the material does not recover its original shape. It occurs when the material is yielding. The process of shearing a material may induce a volumetric strain along with the shear strain. In soil mechanics, the volumetric strain associated with shearing is known as Reynolds' dilation if it increases the volume, or compaction if it decreases the volume. The shear center (also known as the elastic axis or torsional axis) is an imaginary point on a section, where a shear force can be applied without inducing any torsion. In general, the shear center is not the centroid. For cross-sectional areas having one axis of symmetry, the shear center is located on the axis of symmetry. For those having two axes of symmetry, the shear center lies on the centroid of the cross-section.In some materials such as metals, plastics, or granular materials like sand or soils, the shearing motion rapidly localizes into a narrow band, known as a shear band. In that case, all the sliding occurs within the band while the blocks of material on either side of the band simply slide past one another without internal deformation. A special case of shear localization occurs in brittle materials when they fracture along a narrow band. Then, all subsequent shearing occurs within the fracture. Plate tectonics, where the plates of the Earth's crust slide along fracture zones, is an example of this.Shearing in soil mechanics is measured with a triaxial shear test or a direct shear test.".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageID "7139621".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageLength "2797".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageRevisionID "677882700".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Brittle.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Brittleness.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Continuum_mechanics.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Continuum_mechanics.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Deformation_(engineering).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Deformation_(mechanics).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Direct_shear_test.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Elasticity_(physics).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Fracture.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Granular_material.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Karl_von_Terzaghi.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Metal.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Plasticity_(physics).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Plate_tectonics.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Reynolds_dilatancy.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Sand.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Shear_band.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Shear_strength.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Shear_stress.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Soil.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Soil_compaction.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Soil_mechanics.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Strain_(materials_science).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Torsion_(mechanics).
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Triaxial_shear_test.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLink Triaxial_shear_tests.
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shear".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shearing (physics)".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "breaking".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "physical forces".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shear deformation".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shear force".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shear".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shear-driven".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "sheared".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shearing deformation".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shearing motion".
- Shearing_(physics) wikiPageWikiLinkText "shearing".
- Shearing_(physics) hasPhotoCollection Shearing_(physics).
- Shearing_(physics) subject Category:Continuum_mechanics.
- Shearing_(physics) hypernym Deformation.
- Shearing_(physics) comment "Shearing in continuum mechanics refers to the occurrence of a shear strain, which is a deformation of a material substance in which parallel internal surfaces slide past one another. It is induced by a shear stress in the material.".
- Shearing_(physics) label "Shearing (physics)".
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Διάτμηση.
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Afschuiving_(sterkteleer).
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs m.0h69wt.
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Сдвиг_(механика).
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Skjuvning.
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Деформація_зсуву.
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Q13583542.
- Shearing_(physics) sameAs Q13583542.
- Shearing_(physics) wasDerivedFrom Shearing_(physics)?oldid=677882700.
- Shearing_(physics) isPrimaryTopicOf Shearing_(physics).