In linguistics, and particularly phonology, stress or accent is the relative emphasis or prominence given to a certain syllable in a word or to a certain word in a phrase or sentence. That emphasis is typically caused by such properties as increased loudness and vowel length, full articulation of the vowel, and changes in tone. The terms stress and accent are often used synonymously in that context but are sometimes distinguished. For example, when emphasis is produced through pitch alone, it is called pitch accent, and when produced through length alone, it is called quantitative accent. When caused by a combination of various intensified properties, it is called stress accent or dynamic accent; English uses what is called variable stress accent.
Since stress can be realised through a wide range of phonetic properties, such as loudness, vowel length, and pitch (which are also used for other linguistic functions), it is difficult to define stress solely phonetically.
The stress placed on syllables within words is called word stress. Some languages have fixed stress, meaning that the stress on virtually any multisyllable word falls on a particular syllable, such as the penultimate (e.g. Polish) or the first (e.g. Finnish). Other languages, like English and Russian, have lexical stress, where the position of stress in a word is not predictable in that way but lexically encoded. Sometimes more than one level of stress, such as primary stress and secondary stress, may be identified.
Stress is not necessarily a feature of all languages: some, such as French and Mandarin, are sometimes analyzed as lacking lexical stress entirely.
The stress placed on words within sentences is called sentence stress or prosodic stress. That is one of the three components of prosody, along with rhythm and intonation. It includes phrasal stress (the default emphasis of certain words within phrases or clauses), and contrastive stress (used to highlight an item, a word or part of a word, that is given particular focus).
I am a BSc product design student. This is one of my assignments and I have never done physics in my life. Can anyone help? I do not understand at all!
Hi my name is Federico and I'm a student of mechanical engineering and i have to make a research on this material: waspaloy. Now, i have the flow stress model, but i don't have some constant of this equation. In particular , there are a classic JC model where stress is...
Hi,
I have some experimental data and I am interested to use this data to calculated modulus of elasticiy (young's modulus) and Poisson's ratio. The material for which the data is given in an anisotropic material, therefore I need to calculate modulus of elasticity and poisson's ration is x,y...
I'm studying elasticity right now in my chemistry class, and I'm confused as to what exactly tensile stress (and maybe compression stress too ) might mean. It's given in N/m^2. And you're stretching the material.
Is the cypher I'm given indicative of what's happening only one side? Indicative...
Hi :), I need to calculate the shear stress applied between 2 plates and I don't remember how to take the thickness of the plates into account, --So basically I will be grateful if somebody could write the equillibrium for shearing stress between 2 plates (1 plate is applying force on the other...
I do have a question on a project that I am doing now (for my personal enjoyment)
I bought an nice handmade classical guitar that was dropped on the tail-block and cracking it and putting two nice crack from the end of the guitar to the sound hole. Since I only invested $100 I decided to use as...
Some people may remember awhile back when I made a thread showing how when I derived the Einstein tensor and the stress energy momentum tensor for a certain traversable wormhole metric, that the units of the energy momentum tensor were not the same for each element and how a couple of the...
As I'm sure I've mentioned before, I've heard people say that stress and pressure terms in the energy tensor act as a gravitational source, but I don't understand how this could be, given that these terms can simply appear or disappear (in a non-stationary situation), unlike energy and momentum...
Hello I'm having trouble wrapping my head around finding things from stress strain curvesI need to find:
Elastic modulus (Young’s modulus)
•Yield strength
•Tensile strength
•Uniform and total elongation (ductility)
elastic modulus I think is 1240/0.02 = 62000
but I'm unsure of how to find...
I am struggling with a question in my coursework, and would appreciate some guidance.
The question is:
The component shown in Fig 1 is made from a material with the following properties and is subjected to a compressive force of 5kN.
Material Properties :
Young’s Modulus of Elasticity – 200...
I'm trying to understand a problem found on Mechanics of Materials and did not completely understood the problem. I can solve problems like this but I still don't know why I'm solving this way.
It is a simple question: Why the shearing force V does not cause shear stress (\tau_2) on the point A...
Homework Statement
An electromagnetic fatigue-testing machine has an alternating force is applied to the specimen by passing an alternating current of frequency ##f## through the armature. If the weight of the armature is ##40## lb, the stiffness of the spring ##k_1## is ##10217.0296## lb/in...
In the structure shown, a cable is attached to the 50 kN weight and to the beam A-D at point B. If the horizontal uniform beam weighs 8 kN/m, determine the following:
(a) The horizontal and vertical component of the force that the pin at D exerts on the beam A-D.
(b) The force in the cable.
...
I would like to calculate the maximum stress in a hollow beam being bent laterally. There has been some discussion in my office about the correct way to view the system in question, and so would like some other opinions on the matter.
I will include pictures below. In simplified terms, the...
Homework Statement
A car is moving at 65 mph and hits a puddle of water 1 inch deep. What is the shear stress on the tire from the puddle of water if the radius of the tire is 16 inches.
r = 16 inches
u = 65 mph
y = 1 inch
mu = viscosity = 2.344*10^-5 lbf*s/ft^2
Homework Equations
angular...
The maximum allowable compressive stress corresponding to lateral buckling in a discretely laterally supported symmetrical I beam does not depend upon : the modulus of elasticity can anyone please tell me the reason ?
Hello,
I'm having an issue trying to solve an equation- the problem is worded as such:
"A tie bar is made of a material having an ultimate tensile strength of 231 mPa, and must carry a load of 255 kN. What is the diameter of the bar if a factor of safety of 7 is required?I know that the...
I'd like to add a temperature probe to a 4" water pipe downstream of a centrifugal fill pump, but I am afraid of the probe shearing from being subjected to a constant force from the upstream pump (which pumps at about 400 gal/min). Naturally, my thought was to use the drag force equation, but I...
Recently, I used the metric for the traversable wormhole (the one in this link):
http://www.spacetimetravel.org/wurmlochflug/wurmlochflug.html
ds2= -c2dt2 + dl2 + (b2 + l2)(dΘ2 + sin2(Θ)dΦ2)
I derived the metric tensor from this space-time interval and then from there, I derived the...
Homework Statement
A hollow pipe has an inner diameter of 80 mm and an outer diameter of 100 mm. If its end is tightened using a torque wrench using 80 N forces, determine the maximum and minimum shear stress in the material. Where are they located?
Note: In the diagram of the picture, the...
When building a tall support, often the self weight of the support must be considered. For an optimal support, the volume of material, and hence the cost, will be a minimum. If the maximum allowable stress in concrete is 15 MPa, determine the optimal geometry of a column 100 metres tall made of...
Alright so I drew it out like did the reactions and everything then I realized I need to include the diameter of the beam. How do I find the max bending stress while using the diameter of the beam? All I need to know is what exactly I do differently compared to drawing the bending moment...
http://postimg.org/image/onxjqc26l/
I have found the shear stress of the inner cylinder to be 405 Pa like in the solution
but I am having trouble visualizing the total moment of this stress about the center line.
I was wondering if someone could explain where that d(theta) in the moment...
I have gathered all the information:
Span: $1991$ m
Breaking Stress: $1770$ MPa
Load: $370$ KN/m
Drape: $201.2$ m
So far, I've found the allowable stress by dividing the breaking stress by the safety factor, which is $787$MPa. Then, I calculated the total load of the bridge, by multiplying the...
The problem asks for an approximation for the torque needed to rotate a disk that is separated from a stationary boundary by a viscous fluid, given that \tau = \mu \frac{U}{H}.
I did it first using like this:
T = F R
F = \tau A = \mu \frac{U}{H} \pi R^2 where U = \Omega R
And thus T = \mu...
I need a formula for deriving the required material thickness for an acrylic panel.
The project will involve an acrylic window for a large aquarium. I have included a dimensional rendering.
The maximum design stress must be maintained at or below 800PSI.
The maximum water pressure...
For a while I've been working on applying the finite difference method to various problems and am now trying to get a model of stress and strain working. I wrote a sim a few weeks ago and I got one example to run and thought it was good. Now, I've tried it on another example and I see that...
Hello all,
I am M.Tech student and doing my dissertation on friction stir welding stimulation in ANSYS Mechanical APDL. I need to simulate residual stresses induced during welding using ANSYS.
How can I do the same, please reply. I am a beginner in ANSYS. I don't have much knowledge of ANSYS
This is not a textbook problem, instead it is how to understand a common diagram. The diagram occurs in the wiki entry for shear stress
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_stress
It shows a 2D square, anchored on the bottom side, and with positive (rightward) shear stress applied to the...
As far as I understand a rod that has an angular velocity is static. Nonetheless, if we analyze a particle in the rod, this particle will be subject to a centripetal force that will be proportional both to the angular force and radius. Now I understand that the external forces and momenta...
Im currently studying a course on the mechanics of solids..the reference book i use is by Popov..But i can't completely understand the concept of stress in an axial loading.Like for instance.
If a weight W acts on a rod(ignore the rod's weight),stress will vary point to point along the...
I have a cluster of voxels and a 2nd order stress tensor corresponding to each voxel. I was wondering as to what would be the best method to calculate an average stress tensor for the cluster as a whole? Any constructive inputs would be greatly appreciated.
The state of plane-stress at a point is given by σx = -200 MPa, σy = 100 MPa, σxy = 100 MPa
The Maximum shear stress (in MPa) is:
A) 111.8
B) 150.1
C) 180.3
D) 223.6
Explain Procedure also with Answer.
Attempt: i already used Max Shear Stress τ = QV/ib, then also answer is not matching...
Shot peening is a process of inducing RESIDUAL COMPRESSIVE STRESS on the surface layer of metal parts. When shooting particles are colliding on the surface of metal there is a compressive stress. My question is, how can resultant compressive stress exists after the force causing the compression...
Hello everyone !
Homework Statement
In an isotropic aluminum plate (L = 200 mm, b = 50 mm, t = 1 mm), an additionally aluminum plate (l = 50mm, b = 50mm, tV = 0.5 mm) is glued in the center area. The plate is loaded in the y-direction with a normal force of Ny = 10000 N.
Calculate the...
hi pf!
i had an easy question on how to calculate the reynolds stress from the RANS equations. Reynold's Stress is defined as ##\rho \langle v_i v_j \rangle## where ##v_i## is the residual velocity measurement in the ##i## direction.
my question is, how is the reynolds stress actually...
Definition/Summary
Stress is force per area, and is a tensor.
It is measured in pascals (Pa), with dimensions of mass per length per time squared (ML^{-1}T^{-2}).
By comparison, load is force per length, and strain is a dimensionless ratio, stressed length per original length...
A real incompressible fluid is contained in the region between two coaxial cylinders of radii R1 and R2. The outsider cylinder rotates with angular velocity w, in stationary regime, and the flow is purely circular. Neglect the action of gravity.
a) Show that vφ (azimuthal velocity component)...
Homework Statement
Question is attached
Homework Equations
σ(x) = 0
σ(y)= P/A
t(xy)= Tc/j
The Attempt at a Solution
I know how to do the stress transformation, but my only issue is noticing why σ(x)= 0, I can't see it, can someone help me.
I'm faced with a problem where I need to cut the length of the rod body on a tie rod, however, I need to prove that this modification will not affect the entire structure seeing as how the critical points of stress on a tie rod exist at the clevis and end rod. How would I go about proving that...
I have pretty much learned how to derive the left side of Einstein's field equations now (the Einstein tensor that is). Now I need to grasp that stress energy momentum tensor.
Does anybody know of any good sources that will tell me how to derive the components of this tensor?
I ask this...
I could use some guidance as to how I would analyse the stresses in a ring girder similar to the one shown in the attached picture. I have found the stress in the columns that support the ring but I do not know how to find the maximum stress in the ring. The best I have been able to come up with...
I have a cylindrical steel sample tested in tension. It's cross-sectional area is 500 mm2. I am also told that:
Force at yield = 205 kN
Maximum force = 258 kN
Force at fracture = 200 kN
I am asked to calculate the yield stress, ultimate tensile stress and fracture stress if the reduction of...
Hello,
In CFD computation of the Navier-Stokes Equation, is stress tensor assumed to be symmetric?
We know that in NS equation only linear momentum is considered, and the general form of NS equation does not assume that stress tensor is symmetric. Physically, if the tensor is asymmetric then...
The stress-energy tensor is an actual tensor, i.e., under a spacetime parity transformation it stays the same, which is what a tensor with two indices is supposed to do according to the tensor transformation law. This also makes sense because in the Einstein field equations, the stress-energy...
Homework Statement
"see attachment"Normally I would assume that the stress caused by the point load at A is equal to σ=P/Area. however since there is a distance between the two points and because of Saint Venants principle, I don't think that the stress at A will be the same with the stress at...
I was solving this paper, but got stuck on this question, and it's been bugging me endlessly. I don't know what I'm missing. Here's the question:
A rod of 20 dia is fixed to the ceiling of a roof on one end. A rotor of 50 kg mass is attached to the free end with bearings. The CG of the rotor...
[b]1. Homework Statement [b/]
A timber beam, with rectangular cross section (h × b) is reinforced with additional full width (b) steel plates. There is a plate of thickness t securely connected on the bottom and a plate of thickness 2t on the top of the timber to ensure composite action in...
Hey guys, I would just like some confirmation that I got this question correct.
Homework Statement
For the stress block shown in Figure 3a, using the stress equations;
a) Calculate the stresses sigmax' sigmay' and taux'y' on a stress block rotated 15° clockwise from the x-y axes...
Homework Statement
Hey guys,
I have a test coming up soon, and our lecturer gave us a sample test. I am working through it, but we have not been given any answers to confirm if what we are doing is correct.
The Question:
"For the simply supported beam (with upstand) shown in...