Carnegie Mellon OLI
Engineering Statics
Mirrored from oli.cmu.edu · CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0
Mirrored from: oli.cmu.edu · Carnegie Mellon University
License: CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0

About this course
Statics is the study of methods for quantifying the forces between bodies. Forces are responsible for maintaining balance and causing motion of bodies, or changes in their shape. Motion and changes in shape are critical to the functionality of artifacts in the man-made world and to phenomena in the natural world.
Statics is an essential prerequisite for many branches of engineering, such as mechanical, civil, aeronautical, and bioengineering, which address the various consequences of forces.
This Engineering Statics course contains many interactive elements, spread throughout, to promote conceptual understanding and problem solving skills. These include: simulations, some with adjustable paramet ers controlled by the student, to help visualize concepts; “walk-throughs” that integrate voice and graphics to explain an example of the procedure or a difficult concept; and, most prominently, interactive exercises in which students practice problem solving, while receiving hints and feedback.
High school physics, algebra, and trigonometry are recommended prerequisites. Engineering Statics uses algebra and trigonometry and is suitable for use with either calculus- or non-calculus-based academic statics courses. Completion of a beginning physics course is helpful for success in statics, but not required as all the key concepts are included in this course.
Course details
What students will learn
Topics Covered:
Other course details
Approximately 3 hours per module for a total of approximately 60 hours.
December, 2013.
Coming soon.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License .
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