tensible$527785$ - translation to greek
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tensible$527785$ - translation to greek

PHYSICAL QUANTITY THAT EXPRESSES INTERNAL FORCES IN A CONTINUOUS MATERIAL
Tensile stress; Physical stress; Normal stress; Tensible strength; Mechanical stress; Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor; Piola–Kirchoff stress tensor; Stress, mechanical; Deviatorics tress; Compressive; Piola-Kirchhoff stress; Deviatoric; Extensional stress; Longitudinal stress; Stress (physics); Internal stresses; Internal stress; Octahedral shear stress; Piola–Kirchhoff stress tensor; N/m2; Stress path; Cauchy's tetrahedron; Cauchy tetrahedron; Piola-Kirchoff stress tensor
  • Idealized stress in a straight bar with uniform cross-section.
  • Illustration of typical stresses (arrows) across various surface elements on the boundary of a particle (sphere), in a homogeneous material under uniform (but not isotropic) triaxial stress. The normal stresses on the principal axes are +5, +2, and −3 units.
  • The stress across a surface element (yellow disk) is the force that the material on one side (top ball) exerts on the material on the other side (bottom ball), divided by the area of the surface.
  • Components of stress in three dimensions
  • Isotropic tensile stress. Top left: Each face of a cube of homogeneous material is pulled by a force with magnitude ''F'', applied evenly over the entire face whose area is ''A''.  The force across any section ''S'' of the cube must balance the forces applied below the section. In the three sections shown, the forces are ''F'' (top right), ''F''<math>\sqrt{2}</math> (bottom left), and ''F''<math>\sqrt{3}/2</math> (bottom right); and the area of ''S'' is ''A'', ''A''<math>\sqrt{2}</math> and ''A''<math>\sqrt{3}/2</math>, respectively. So the stress across ''S'' is ''F''/''A'' in all three cases.
  • Simplified model of a truss for stress analysis, assuming unidimensional elements under uniform axial tension or compression.
  • The ratio <math>\sigma = F/A</math> may be only an average stress. The stress may be unevenly distributed over the cross section (''m''–''m''), especially near the attachment points (''n''–''n'').
  • For stress modeling, a [[fishing pole]] may be considered one-dimensional.
  • Shear stress in a horizontal bar loaded by two offset blocks.
  • Glass vase with the ''[[craquelé]]'' effect. The cracks are the result of brief but intense stress created when the semi-molten piece is briefly dipped in water.<ref name=lamglass/>
  • A [[tank car]] made from bent and welded steel plates.

tensible      
adj. έντατος

Definition

Compressive
·adj Compressing, or having power or tendency to compress; as, a compressive force.

Wikipedia

Stress (mechanics)

In continuum mechanics, stress is a physical quantity that describes forces present during deformation. An object being pulled apart, such as a stretched elastic band, is subject to tensile stress and may undergo elongation. An object being pushed together, such as a crumpled sponge, is subject to compressive stress and may undergo shortening. The greater the force and the smaller the cross-sectional area of the body on which it acts, the greater the stress. Stress has units of force per area, such as newtons per square meter (N/m2) or pascal (Pa).

Stress expresses the internal forces that neighbouring particles of a continuous material exert on each other, while strain is the measure of the deformation of the material. For example, when a solid vertical bar is supporting an overhead weight, each particle in the bar pushes on the particles immediately below it. When a liquid is in a closed container under pressure, each particle gets pushed against by all the surrounding particles. The container walls and the pressure-inducing surface (such as a piston) push against them in (Newtonian) reaction. These macroscopic forces are actually the net result of a very large number of intermolecular forces and collisions between the particles in those molecules. Stress is frequently represented by a lowercase Greek letter sigma (σ).

Strain inside a material may arise by various mechanisms, such as stress as applied by external forces to the bulk material (like gravity) or to its surface (like contact forces, external pressure, or friction). Any strain (deformation) of a solid material generates an internal elastic stress, analogous to the reaction force of a spring, that tends to restore the material to its original non-deformed state. In liquids and gases, only deformations that change the volume generate persistent elastic stress. If the deformation changes gradually with time, even in fluids there will usually be some viscous stress, opposing that change. Elastic and viscous stresses are usually combined under the name mechanical stress.

Significant stress may exist even when deformation is negligible or non-existent (a common assumption when modeling the flow of water). Stress may exist in the absence of external forces; such built-in stress is important, for example, in prestressed concrete and tempered glass. Stress may also be imposed on a material without the application of net forces, for example by changes in temperature or chemical composition, or by external electromagnetic fields (as in piezoelectric and magnetostrictive materials).

The relation between mechanical stress, deformation, and the rate of change of deformation can be quite complicated, although a linear approximation may be adequate in practice if the quantities are sufficiently small. Stress that exceeds certain strength limits of the material will result in permanent deformation (such as plastic flow, fracture, cavitation) or even change its crystal structure and chemical composition.