structural engineer - определение. Что такое structural engineer
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Что (кто) такое structural engineer - определение

Найдено результатов: 978
Structural engineer         
PERSON WHO ANALYZES, DESIGNS, PLANS, AND RESEARCHES STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS AND STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS
Structural Engineer; Structural engineers
Structural engineers analyze, design, plan, and research structural components and structural systems to achieve design goals and ensure the safety and comfort of users or occupants. Their work takes account mainly of safety, technical, economic, and environmental concerns, but they may also consider aesthetic and social factors.
structural engineer         
PERSON WHO ANALYZES, DESIGNS, PLANS, AND RESEARCHES STRUCTURAL COMPONENTS AND STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS
Structural Engineer; Structural engineers
(structural engineers)
A structural engineer is an engineer who works on large structures such as roads, bridges, and large buildings.
N-COUNT
Structural engineering         
  • An [[Airbus A380]], the world's largest passenger airliner
  • A [[statically determinate]] simply supported beam, bending under an evenly distributed load
  • bolt]] in [[shear stress]]. Top figure illustrates single shear, bottom figure illustrates double shear.
  • [[Burj Khalifa]], in [[Dubai]], the [[world's tallest building]], shown under construction in 2007 (since completed)
  • Earthquake-proof pyramid [[El Castillo, Chichen Itza]]
  •  [[Galileo Galilei]] published the book ''[[Two New Sciences]]'' in which he examined the failure of simple structures.
  •  [[Leonhard Euler]] developed the theory of [[buckling]] of columns.
  •  Designing medical equipment needs in-depth understanding of structural engineering
  • The McDonnell Planetarium by [[Gyo Obata]] in [[St Louis, Missouri]], USA, a concrete shell structure
  • [[Millennium Dome]] in London, UK, by [[Richard Rogers]] and [[Buro Happold]]
  •  Design of missile needs in depth understanding of [[Structural Analysis]]
  • Roman]] era aqueduct circa 19 BC
  • laws of motion]].
  • Ove Arup & Partners]]
  • ''Little Belt'']]: a [[truss bridge]] in [[Denmark]]
SUB-DISCIPLINE OF CIVIL ENGINEERING DEALING WITH THE CREATION OF MAN MADE STRUCTURES
Structural design; Structural Engineering; Structure (engineering); Structural Design; Simply supported; Engineering structure; Mechanical structure
Structural engineering is a sub-discipline of civil engineering in which structural engineers are trained to design the 'bones and muscles' that create the form and shape of man-made structures. Structural engineers also must understand and calculate the stability, strength, rigidity and earthquake-susceptibility of built structures for buildingsFAO online publication and nonbuilding structures.
structural engineering         
  • An [[Airbus A380]], the world's largest passenger airliner
  • A [[statically determinate]] simply supported beam, bending under an evenly distributed load
  • bolt]] in [[shear stress]]. Top figure illustrates single shear, bottom figure illustrates double shear.
  • [[Burj Khalifa]], in [[Dubai]], the [[world's tallest building]], shown under construction in 2007 (since completed)
  • Earthquake-proof pyramid [[El Castillo, Chichen Itza]]
  •  [[Galileo Galilei]] published the book ''[[Two New Sciences]]'' in which he examined the failure of simple structures.
  •  [[Leonhard Euler]] developed the theory of [[buckling]] of columns.
  •  Designing medical equipment needs in-depth understanding of structural engineering
  • The McDonnell Planetarium by [[Gyo Obata]] in [[St Louis, Missouri]], USA, a concrete shell structure
  • [[Millennium Dome]] in London, UK, by [[Richard Rogers]] and [[Buro Happold]]
  •  Design of missile needs in depth understanding of [[Structural Analysis]]
  • Roman]] era aqueduct circa 19 BC
  • laws of motion]].
  • Ove Arup & Partners]]
  • ''Little Belt'']]: a [[truss bridge]] in [[Denmark]]
SUB-DISCIPLINE OF CIVIL ENGINEERING DEALING WITH THE CREATION OF MAN MADE STRUCTURES
Structural design; Structural Engineering; Structure (engineering); Structural Design; Simply supported; Engineering structure; Mechanical structure
¦ noun the branch of civil engineering concerned with large modern buildings and similar structures.
Derivatives
structural engineer noun
Structural Engineering exam         
The Structural Engineering exam is a written examination given by state licensing boards in the United States as part of the testing for licensing structural engineers. This exam is written by the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying.
Structural element         
ENGINEERING TERM; STRUCTURAL PART OF A COMPLEX STRUCTURE
Structural member; Structural component; List of structural elements
Structural elements are used in structural analysis to split a complex structure into simple elements. Within a structure, an element cannot be broken down (decomposed) into parts of different kinds (e.
Structural coloration         
  • Magnificent non-iridescent colours of [[blue-and-yellow macaw]] created by random nanochannels
  • Electron micrograph]] of a fractured surface of [[nacre]] showing multiple thin layers
  • [[Buttercup]] petals exploit both yellow pigment and structural coloration.
  • Butterfly wing at different magnifications reveals microstructured chitin acting as a [[diffraction grating]]
  • Structural coloration through selective mirrors in the [[emerald swallowtail]]
  • One of [[Gabriel Lippmann]]'s colour photographs, "Le Cervin", 1899, made using a monochrome photographic process (a single emulsion). The colours are structural, created by interference with light reflected from the back of the glass plate.
  • [[Robert Hooke]]'s 1665 ''[[Micrographia]]'' contains the first observations of structural colours.
  • Drawing of 'firtree' micro-structures in ''[[Morpho]]'' butterfly wing scale
  • In 1892, [[Frank Evers Beddard]] noted that  ''[[Chrysospalax]]'' golden moles' thick fur was structurally coloured.
  • The most intense blue known in nature: ''[[Pollia condensata]]'' berries
  • A 3-slide series of pictures taken with and without a pair of MasterImage 3D circularly polarized movie glasses of some dead European rose chafers (Cetonia aurata) whose shiny green colour comes from left-polarized light. Note that, without glasses, both the beetles and their images have shiny colour. The right-polarizer removes the colour of the beetles but leaves the color of the images. The left-polarizer does the opposite, showing reversal of handedness of the reflected light.
  • interfere]].
  • Variable ring patterns on mantles of ''Hapalochlaena lunulata''
PRODUCTION OF COLOUR BY MICROSCOPICALLY STRUCTURED SURFACES, BOTH AS A NATURAL PHENOMENON AND IN TECHNOLOGY
Structural color; Structural colour; Schemochrome; Structural colouration; Schemochromatic; Structural colours; Morphotex
Structural coloration in animals, and a few plants, is the production of colour by microscopically structured surfaces fine enough to interfere with visible light, sometimes in combination with pigments. For example, peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are often iridescent.
Structural Engineering Research Centre         
RESEARCH INSTITUTE IN CHENNAI
User:Rahulghose/Structural Engineering Research Centre; CSIR-Structural Engineering Research Centre
CSIR-Structural Engineering Research Centre (CSIR-SERC), Chennai is one of the 38 constituent laboratories of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research in India. The institute is a certified ISO:9001 quality institute.
Structural type system         
MAJOR CLASS OF TYPE SYSTEM, IN WHICH TYPE COMPATIBILITY AND EQUIVALENCE ARE DETERMINED BY THE TYPE'S ACTUAL STRUCTURE OR DEFINITION, AND NOT BY OTHER CHARACTERISTICS SUCH AS ITS NAME OR PLACE OF DECLARATION
Structural subtyping; Structural typing; Structural type
A structural type system (or property-based type system) is a major class of type systems in which type compatibility and equivalence are determined by the type's actual structure or definition and not by other characteristics such as its name or place of declaration. Structural systems are used to determine if types are equivalent and whether a type is a subtype of another.
Chief engineer         
  • Chief engineer in the engine room of MF ''Bastø II'', a Norwegian [[ferry]]
  • 285x285px
MOST SENIOR AND QUALIFIED ENGINEER IN A SHIP
Chief Engineer Officer; Chief Engineer; Leitender Ingenieur; Engineer-in-chief
A chief engineer, commonly referred to as "ChEng" or "Chief", is the most senior engine officer of an engine department on a ship, typically a merchant ship, and holds overall leadership and the responsibility of that department.Marine Chief Engineer As a person who holds one of the most senior roles on the ship, they must have excellent communication and leadership skills.