Mathematical Principles Of Mechanics And Electromagnetism Pt A Analytical And Continuum Mechanics


Download Mathematical Principles Of Mechanics And Electromagnetism Pt A Analytical And Continuum Mechanics PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Mathematical Principles Of Mechanics And Electromagnetism Pt A Analytical And Continuum Mechanics book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Mathematical Principles of Mechanics and Electromagnetism


Mathematical Principles of Mechanics and Electromagnetism

Author: Chao-cheng Wang

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2013-03-09


DOWNLOAD





The Calculus of Variations and Optimal Control


The Calculus of Variations and Optimal Control

Author: George Leitmann

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2013-06-29


DOWNLOAD





When the Tyrian princess Dido landed on the North African shore of the Mediterranean sea she was welcomed by a local chieftain. He offered her all the land that she could enclose between the shoreline and a rope of knotted cowhide. While the legend does not tell us, we may assume that Princess Dido arrived at the correct solution by stretching the rope into the shape of a circular arc and thereby maximized the area of the land upon which she was to found Carthage. This story of the founding of Carthage is apocryphal. Nonetheless it is probably the first account of a problem of the kind that inspired an entire mathematical discipline, the calculus of variations and its extensions such as the theory of optimal control. This book is intended to present an introductory treatment of the calculus of variations in Part I and of optimal control theory in Part II. The discussion in Part I is restricted to the simplest problem of the calculus of variations. The topic is entirely classical; all of the basic theory had been developed before the turn of the century. Consequently the material comes from many sources; however, those most useful to me have been the books of Oskar Bolza and of George M. Ewing. Part II is devoted to the elementary aspects of the modern extension of the calculus of variations, the theory of optimal control of dynamical systems.

Dynamical Systems and Evolution Equations


Dynamical Systems and Evolution Equations

Author: John A. Walker

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2013-03-09


DOWNLOAD





This book grew out of a nine-month course first given during 1976-77 in the Division of Engineering Mechanics, University of Texas (Austin), and repeated during 1977-78 in the Department of Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics, Northwestern University. Most of the students were in their second year of graduate study, and all were familiar with Fourier series, Lebesgue integration, Hilbert space, and ordinary differential equa tions in finite-dimensional space. This book is primarily an exposition of certain methods of topological dynamics that have been found to be very useful in the analysis of physical systems but appear to be well known only to specialists. The purpose of the book is twofold: to present the material in such a way that the applications-oriented reader will be encouraged to apply these methods in the study of those physical systems of personal interest, and to make the coverage sufficient to render the current research literature intelligible, preparing the more mathematically inclined reader for research in this particular area of applied mathematics. We present only that portion of the theory which seems most useful in applications to physical systems. Adopting the view that the world is deterministic, we consider our basic problem to be predicting the future for a given physical system. This prediction is to be based on a known equation of evolution, describing the forward-time behavior of the system, but it is to be made without explicitly solving the equation.