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Title:
Hydroelasticity of ships
Publication Information:
London : Cambridge University Press, 1979
ISBN:
9780521223287
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30000004663062 VM156 B57 1979 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

A ship is a flexible structure that moves bodily and distorts when it encounters waves. This behaviour is potentially dangerous and it must therefore be predicted as a necessary part of ship design. Hitherto the theory of ship structures has had to employ simplifying assumptions, and the dynamical theory has been founded largely on the assumption of rigidity. This book, however, shows how the wave responses of a ship can be calculated using linear dynamics. This general treatment adapts the techniques of structural theory, hydrodynamics, oceanography and statistical theory to the needs of naval architecture. In a radically new departure the authors unify these various techniques in their systematic use of dynamical theory. The principles are applicable to offshore structures in general as well as to ships.


Table of Contents

Preface
1 Ship response
2 The dry hull
3 More accurate analysis of hull dynamics
4 The characteristics of practical hulls
5 Ship distortion in still water
6 Wave theory
7 Symmetric generalised fluid forces
8 Symmetric response
9 Transient loading
10 Antisymmetric response to wave excitation
11 Statistical analysis of ship response
12 Responses of other marine structures to waves
Bibliography
Index
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