Instructor(s)
Prof. Louis Bucciarelli
MIT Course Number
1.050
As Taught In
Fall 2004
Level
Undergraduate
Course Description
Course Features
- Faculty introduction - video
- Assignments: problem sets with solutions
- Assignments: activity (no examples)
- Assignments: design (no examples)
Course Highlights
This course features an online version of the textbook for the course (Engineering Mechanics for Structures, written by Professor Louis L. Bucciarelli) in the readings section. This course also has virtually all of its materials online, including real tools and data, interactive exercises, and design exercises in the assignments section.
Course Description
1.050 is a sophomore-level engineering mechanics course, commonly labelled "Statics and Strength of Materials" or "Solid Mechanics I." This course introduces students to the fundamental principles and methods of structural mechanics. Topics covered include: static equilibrium, force resultants, support conditions, analysis of determinate planar structures (beams, trusses, frames), stresses and strains in structural elements, states of stress (shear, bending, torsion), statically indeterminate systems, displacements and deformations, introduction to matrix methods, elastic stability, and approximate methods. Design exercises are used to encourage creative student initiative and systems thinking.
Other Versions
Other OCW Versions
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