Theory of Vibration with Applications
Theory of Vibration with Applications

Theory of Vibration with Applications

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Prentice Hall

UPC:
978013651068

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$139.00

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Theory of Vibration with Applications Specs:
Product NameTheory of Vibration with Applications
ManufacturerPrentice Hall
Product Number MPN3522574
Retail Price $139.00
EAN-1409780136510680
UPC978013651068
Specifications 
TitleTheory of Vibration with Applications (5th Edition)
ISBN013651068X
Author(s)William T. Thomson, Marie Dillon Dahleh
Release Date1997-08-07
FormatHardcover
Num of Pages534
Num. of Items1
EAN9780136510680
Deal first added on:19-February-2004

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Latest 6 Reviews
Here is what people are saying about the Theory of Vibration with Applications
3 Star Rating  "Theory of Vibration with Applications (5th Edition)"2009-09-05
- Reviewed By User: A294ISPKZ7Q2S8
This book is what it says, a vibrations textbook that is basically designed to go with a college class. Not the best textbook in the world, but not too bad either. It gives a variety of topics in each chapter, but I personally wish it would address the topics more thoroughly instead of glazing over them. This is especially true with examples. For example, it would introduce a topic then give an example using polar or cylindrical coordinates, but wouldn't even cover some of the similar problems in other coordinate systems, which can be nice especially early on in the text. While it isn't completely necessary if your class covers enough examples, it helps if your going through a fast pace class which finishes these chapters in about 3 hours of class time at most. The chapters are really dense, so this is definitely not a textbook to just read lightly once. To all those who get this for a class, good luck.
 
5 Star Rating  "The Standard Text (but not an Introduction-level text)"2008-12-22
- Reviewed By mesabibooks
I used a previous edition as a student, and I used this edition as an instructor. I also had a copy on my desk at the GM Noise and Vibration Lab when I worked there, as did many of my colleagues.

The text is best used to accompany lecture notes in a senior or first year graduate engineering course.

When I used the 5th edition 10 years ago, it had just come out, and the price at the college bookstore was $140, which was very high for the time. Students howled about the price, which is probably the real reason for the mixed reviews.
 
5 Star Rating  "Very good book if you are willing to put effort"2008-05-22
- Reviewed By pradeep_h
This review is for the paperback fifth edition of this book.

Alright, I have read so many negative reviews of this book here. So even though this book was recommended elsewhere I was slightly apprehensive in buying it. I have read only the first 2 chapters, but I am so overwhelmed that I thought I will write a review.

My rating: excellent. This book will make you think and understand the subject. But it expects a certain level of mathematical and engineering maturity (not higher than undergraduate). The problem sets are excellent. When you sit and finish through the problems you really understand the topic. Lot of times I read the text twice and made sure that I understood the topic before starting the problems. But then I had to come back and refer again and surely I will figure out some missing information. It takes time but is very rewarding. Most of all this text doesn't assume that the readers are dumb - it expects that the readers can think.

What do I mean that the book expects a certain mathematical and engineering maturity? I will give a couple of examples. In the introductory chapter it has a small section on decomposition of periodic motion into Fourier series. There it expects for you to know how to integrate Integral(cos mx cos nx dx) or that Cos A cos B = 1/2[Cos(A+B) - cos(A-B)]. In second chapter to find the effective mass of a simply supported beam with a point load in the middle, it expects you to know
that the deflection of the beam can be written as y=y_max(3(x/l)-4(x/l)^3). I mean it will straight away write y=ymax... etc. No other intermediate steps. It will also just integrate this y_max(3(x/l)-4(x/l)^3) with respect to x and write the result as 0.4857 y_max or whatever value it is. It will expect that you know how to solve differential equation into characteristic equation and particular solution. It gives a proof for solving md^x/dt^2 + cdx/dt + kx = 0 but it is better for you to have some background in differential equation (again not more that undergraduate level) to fully understand it.

What do I mean that the book will make you think? For example when discussing energy methods on simple harmonic motion, it will say that due to conservation of energy T1+U1 = T2+U2 where 1 and 2 denotes two different positions of the vibrating body. By choosing 1 to be the static equilibrium position and choosing U1=0 as the reference potential energy, and 2 be the position corresponding to max disp, we have T1+0 = 0+U2. Now it says that if the system is undergoing harmonic motion then, T1 and U2 are max values and the preceding equation give rise to T_max = U_max. And that this equation will lead directly to natural frequency. It is up to you to figure out that for simple harmonic motion, x is given by x = A
sin(wt+phi), v = Aw cos(wt+phi), a = -Aw^2 sin(wt+phi). So when v = 0 it implies that cos (wt+phi) = 0 and that implies that sin(wt+phi) is +- 1 so x is max (also conversely). So T_max = 1/2*m*A*w^2 , since cos (wt+phi)=+-1. Also U_max = 1/2*k*A^2, since sin(wt+phi)= +-1. So T_max = U_max gives w^2 = k/m. (We are actually eliminating sin and cos terms by taking the max values).

In short, a very very good book for some one who has an undergraduate background in engineering and who is willing to think and put the effort. If you want a quick read or if you are looking for an easy book then this is probably not for you. But remember that you can only learn if you put the effort. There are a few typos for the answers at the back of the book, but that doesn't diminish the book's worth.

There are 3 typos I found in answers to odd problems at the back of the book. I have finished problems of only chapter 1.
Corrections for odd number answers at back:
-------------------------------------------
1.3) d^x/dt^2 _ max = 287.1 what is given is 278.1
1.11) x(t) = 1/2 + 4/pi^2( cos w1t + 1/3^2 cos 3w1t + 1/5^2 cos 5w1t + ...)
(what is given is sin w1t for the first harmonic term)
1.16) a_o = 2/3 (what is given is a_o = 1/3).

Again I may be wrong in the typos. Kindly double check them before using it.
 
1 Star Rating  "Terrible book"2008-01-30
- Reviewed By User: A226KIZPTJNTYW
The coverage is spotty at best, very much like "swiss cheese" as another reviewer pointed out. Their are very few examples, and they are poorly worked out. In addition, the exercises somehow expect you to know material never even covered in the text and are nigh unsolvable unless you already have experience with vibration theory or a copy of the solution manual (also very poorly written).

It is extremely difficult for beginners and not terribly useful as a reference either. Overall one of the worst texts I've ever had to use.
 
1 Star Rating  "Swiss Cheese"2006-10-25
- Reviewed By User: A14YVW3D6O3V7Z
The topics covered are many but the depth is zero and the examples are about 90% too short. It doesn't really help to get a picture and a solution without intermediate steps or even halfhearted explanation. This book is completely inaccessible to a student and will sit useless on the shelf as $130 bucks wasted. Disgusting.
 
1 Star Rating  "Hard for students and TAs"2006-08-13
- Reviewed By vkiuhan
When I took this class I was utterly confused by most of the material and some of the problems made no sense whatsoever, neither the set up nor the solution. When I TA'ed the class, luckily the professor worked mainly out of a course erader made of his own notes. The bad part was he picked problems out of this book for homework. Many of the solutions are quite simple, WHEN YOU UNDERSTAND THE PROBLEM CORRECTLY, a task this book left completely up to me to explain to the students. Also, a few solutions were just plain wrong or required huge simplifications and assumptions that were not intuitive.
If you have to buy this book, buy the cheapest copy out there or just photocopy the few pages you'll need.
Also, where the h*ll do they get the nerve to charge so much for such a short useless book. It's a fifth edition that doesn't show much care or thought put into it.
This book is typical of what's wrong in the textbook publishing industry, we students are overcharged for garbage and required to buy the newest edition of content that hasn't changed in a hundred years. It's almost as if we're paying professors for plagiarizing classical theory!
I strongly recommend going elsewhere to LEARN the concepts of mechanical vibrations.
 
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