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  2. Shearing (physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearing_(physics)

    The rectangularly-framed section has deformed into a parallelogram (shear strain), but the triangular roof trusses have resisted the shear stress and remain undeformed. In continuum mechanics, shearing refers to the occurrence of a shear strain, which is a deformation of a material substance in which parallel internal surfaces slide past one another.

  3. Shear force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_force

    This section calculates the force required to cut a piece of material with a shearing action. The relevant information is the area of the material being sheared, i.e. the area across which the shearing action takes place, and the shear strength of the material. A round bar of steel is used as an example.

  4. Shear stress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_stress

    A shearing force is applied to the top of the rectangle while the bottom is held in place. The resulting shear stress, τ, deforms the rectangle into a parallelogram. The area involved would be the top of the parallelogram. Shear stress (often denoted by τ, Greek: tau) is the component of stress coplanar with a material cross section.

  5. Shear strength - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_strength

    In engineering, shear strength is the strength of a material or component against the type of yield or structural failure when the material or component fails in shear. A shear load is a force that tends to produce a sliding failure on a material along a plane that is parallel to the direction of the force.

  6. Shear modulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_modulus

    The shear modulus is one of several quantities for measuring the stiffness of materials. All of them arise in the generalized Hooke's law: . Young's modulus E describes the material's strain response to uniaxial stress in the direction of this stress (like pulling on the ends of a wire or putting a weight on top of a column, with the wire getting longer and the column losing height),

  7. Shear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear

    Shear (geology), a form of fault in rocks; Shear stress in physics, refers to a stress state that will cause shearing when it exceeds a material's shear strength; Shearing (physics), the deformation of a material substance in which parallel internal surfaces slide past one another; Shear strength

  8. Shear flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_flow

    In these instances, it can be useful to express internal shear stress as shear flow, which is found as the shear stress multiplied by the thickness of the section. An equivalent definition for shear flow is the shear force V per unit length of the perimeter around a thin-walled section. Shear flow has the dimensions of force per unit of length. [1]

  9. Simple shear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_shear

    In solid mechanics, a simple shear deformation is defined as an isochoric plane deformation in which there are a set of line elements with a given reference orientation that do not change length and orientation during the deformation. [1] This deformation is differentiated from a pure shear by virtue of the presence of a rigid rotation of the ...