| shear |
Sliding of skin over subcutaneous tissues and bones causing a kink in cutaneous capillaries which may lead to ischemia.
Ãâó: www.hollister.com/us/wound/resource/glossary.html
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| shear strength |
The stress required to produce fracture in the plane of cross section, the conditions of loading being such that the directions of force and of resistance are parallel and opposite although their paths are offset a specified minimum amount. The maximum load divided by the original cross-sectional area of a section separated by shear.
Ãâó: www.corrosionsource.com/handbook/glossary/s_glos.h...
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| shear |
The force acting across any beam or structural unit.
Ãâó: www.nireland.com/bridgeman/Dictionary.htm
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| shear |
a type of strain in which the shape of a material is displaced laterally with no corresponding change in volume.
Ãâó: www.ngdir.ir/SiteLinks/Kids/html/g001_GPS_________...
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| shear |
An engineering term referring to forces applied normal to the surface of a given material. The movement between plies of a laminate is referred to as interlaminate shear.
Ãâó: www.justintanks.com/def.html
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