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  Graduate School–New Brunswick 2010–2012 Programs, Faculty, and Courses Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 650 Graduate Courses  

Graduate Courses

16:650:500 Experimental Methods (3) Survey of current measuring techniques used in mechanical and aerospace engineering research; principles of digital and analog data acquisition and reduction. Prerequisites: Undergraduate fluid mechanics and heat transfer.
16:650:504,505 Mathematical Methods in Engineering (3,3) Review of matrix algebra; numerical methods for inversion; ordinary differential equations, functions of a complex variable; calculus of variations; partial differential equations and their classification; Fourier methods; asymptotic and perturbation methods. Prerequisites: Undergraduate calculus and differential equations.
16:650:510 (F) Computer-Aided Design (3) Broad introduction to computer-aided design and modeling. Mathematical representations of curves, surfaces, and solids. Two- and three-dimensional computer graphics. Programming required for design projects. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
16:650:512 Robotics and Mechatronics (3) Introduction to robotics and mechatronics, including mechanisms and control theories as well as applications; manipulator mechanics; design considerations; control fundamentals; model and sensor-based control algorithm development; walking robots; medical and space robotics; experimental mechatronics. Prerequisites: Undergraduate vibrations, controls, and dynamics.
16:650:514 Design of Mechanisms (3) Complete mechanism design cycle: synthesis, analysis, and redesign; analytical, numerical, and visualization techniques applied to mechanism synthesis (type, number, and dimensional) and analysis; application of optimization methods in the design cycle; planar and spatial mechanisms. Prerequisite: Undergraduate kinematics of mechanisms or equivalent.
16:650:518 Biomechanical Systems (3) Selected topics from the study of the human body as a mechanical system, with emphasis on modeling, analysis, and design. Investigation of biomechanical systems in orthopedic surgery and physical rehabilitation. Prerequisites: Undergraduate mechanical design and solid mechanics.
16:650:520 Tissue Mechanics (3) Mechanical properties of living soft and hard tissues as explained by their ultrastructural makeup. Function-property relationships of biological tissues and their pathological implications. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in mechanical/aerospace engineering.
16:650:522 (S) Analytical Dynamics (3) Newtonian mechanics, rotating frames, variational principles, Lagrange's equations, Hamilton's equations, Euler angles, Euler equations, and gyroscopic motion. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in mechanical/aerospace engineering.
16:650:524 Optimal Design in Mechanical Engineering (3) Formulation and solution of engineering optimal design problems in mechanical engineering. Introduction to algorithms for constrained and unconstrained searching. Application to optimal design of mechanical and structural components. Use of discretization techniques; shape optimization problem. Prerequisite: 16:650:550.
16:650:530 Fluid Mechanics I (3) Physical properties of fluids; basic equations of motion; kinematics; exact solutions of the Euler and Navier-Stokes equations; incompressible boundary-layer equations and applications; flow past bodies, jets, and wakes; introduction to turbulent flows. Prerequisite: Undergraduate fluid mechanics.
16:650:532 Experimental Methods in Fluid Mechanics (3) Experimental and analytical data tools needed by fluid experimentalists, data acquisition, measurements, model building, optical diagnostics, and visualization. Prerequisite: Undergraduate fluid mechanics.
16:650:534 Computational Fluid Mechanics (3) Development and application of computational methods for fluid mechanics based on the incompressible and compressible Navier-Stokes equations, boundary-layer equations, and Euler equations. Selected algorithms, including finite difference, finite volume, and special techniques. Applications chosen from incompressible and compressible flows. Prerequisites: Undergraduate fluid mechanics and thermodynamics.
16:650:541 Microsystems and Nanosystems (3) Microscale and nanoscale phenomena for multidisciplinary applications in alternate and renewable energy, water purification, lab-on-chip devices, life sciences, and sensors.  Laboratory demonstrations for fabrication and characterization of microsystems and nanosystems. Prakash
16:650:550 Mechanics of Materials (3) Theories and methods for evaluating stresses and deformations of mechanical components and structures under static and dynamic loading. Prerequisite: Undergraduate solid mechanics.
16:650:554 Mechanics of Continuua (Solid Mechanics I) (3) Introduction to the fundamental concepts of continuum mechanics, including stress and strain, kinematics, balance laws, and material symmetry. Theories of elasticity, plasticity, fracture, viscoelasticity, and classical fluid dynamics. Prerequisites: Undergraduate mechanics and engineering mathematics.
16:650:556 Theory of Elasticity (Solid Mechanics II) (3) Classical theory of linear elasticity. Equations of equilibrium; plane stress; plane strain; Airy stress function; torsion; energy theorems; solutions of selected classical problems. Prerequisite: 16:642:527 or equivalent. Corequisite: 16:642:528.
16:650:570 Conduction Heat Transfer (3) Analytical methods in steady and transient heat conduction in solids; finite difference methods in heat conduction. Prerequisite: Undergraduate heat transfer.
16:650:574 Thermodynamic Theory (3) Principles and methods of thermodynamics, including classical, statistical, and irreversible thermodynamics. Prerequisite: Undergraduate thermodynamics.
16:650:578 Convection Heat Transfer (3) Forced and free convection in laminar and turbulent flows; mass transfer; applications. Prerequisites: Undergraduate heat transfer; 16:650:530 or equivalent.
16:650:582 Computational Heat Transfer (3) Development and application of computational methods for conduction; natural, forced, and mixed convection; radiation; traditional and recent conjugate heat transfer; and mass transfer. Selected algorithms include finite difference, finite volume, finite element, and spectral techniques. Applications chosen from thermal energy systems, environmental heat transfer, microelectronics packaging, materials processing, and other areas. Prerequisites: Undergraduate fluid mechanics and thermodynamics.
16:650:601,602 Independent Study (3,3) Independent studies or investigations in a selected area of mechanical and aerospace engineering. The instructor prepares a syllabus on the subject being studied for student's file. Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and graduate program director.
16:650:604 Advanced Engineering Analysis (3) Behavior of linear and nonlinear systems, phase-plane analysis, bifurcation, stability criteria, perturbation methods. Examples from fluid mechanics, dynamics, and heat transfer. Prerequisites: 16:642:527; 16:650:522 or 530.
16:650:606 Advanced Mechanical Engineering Topics (3) Topics of current interest in mechanical and aerospace engineering, such as applications of computer-aided intelligence, computer-aided manufacturing, and waves in fluids.
16:650:608,609 Mechanical Engineering Colloquium (1,1) Lectures by invited speakers on current research topics in mechanical and aerospace engineering. Prerequisite (for credit): Ph.D. candidacy in mechanical and aerospace engineering.
16:650:618 Special Applications in Control (3) Introduction to recently developed concepts in control theory and their application in real-life problems. Topics include robust and optimal control (H2, H-infinity, and advanced LQR control techniques), neural networks, and system identification. Prerequisites: Graduate background in mechanical control systems and vibration.
16:650:622 Advanced Optimization (3) Focuses on the mathematical framework of optimization; in-depth coverage of mathematical programming, probabilistic optimization methods, global optimization, and multiobjective optimization and their applications. Prerequisite: 16:650:524.
16:650:626 Advanced Design and Fabrication (3) Synthesis of design methodologies with application to industrial problems. Prerequisites: 16:650:514 and 524, or equivalent.
16:650:630 Fluid Mechanics II (3) Vortex dynamics of incompressible inviscid and low-viscosity fluids. One-, two-, and three-dimensional compressible flows. Linear, nonlinear, acoustic, and gravity waves; shock waves using shock polars. Stability of viscous and inviscid vortex, wave, and boundary-layer flows. Special topics include accelerated flows: Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmeyer-Meshkov for supersonic combustion and inertial confinement fusion; visualization and quantification of evolving flows; and turbulent scaling laws. Prerequisite: 16:650:530 or equivalent or permission of instructor.
16:650:631 Fluid Mechanics III (3) Waves, low reynolds number flows, stratified, and inviscid flows. Prerequisite: 16:650:630.
16:650:634 Compressible Flows (3) Linear and nonlinear theory of one-dimensional inviscid unsteady motion, compression and expansion waves, shock-tube and wave interactions; two-dimensional inviscid steady motions, including linearized subsonic and supersonic flows; boundary-layer theory of compressible fluids. Prerequisite: 16:650:630 or equivalent.
16:650:636 Turbulence (3) Physical aspects and methods of analysis of turbulent flows; scaling laws, modeling techniques, and statistical description of turbulence; application to problems in engineering science and geophysical fluid dynamics. Prerequisite: 16:650:530.
16:650:638 (F) Hydrodynamic Stability (3) Thermal, centrifugal, and shear instabilities; linear, nonlinear, and energy methods. Prerequisite: 16:650:530 or equivalent.
16:650:640 Acoustics (3) Sound-wave propagation in gases and liquids. Reflection and transmission phenomena. Emission and absorption of sound. Prerequisite: Undergraduate fluid mechanics. Pre- or corequisite: 16:642:530.
16:650:642 Suspensions (3) Fluid mechanics of small bubbles, droplets, and rigid particles in fluids. Fluid forces and heat transfer rate. Two-phase fluid dynamics. Applications to aerosols, bubbly liquids, emulsions, and hydrosols. Prerequisites: 16:650:530 or equivalent and one graduate-level course in applied mathematics, or permission of instructor.
16:650:651 Mechanics of Inelastic Behavior (Solid Mechanics III) (3) Mechanics of inelastic behavior, including plasticity, viscoelasticity, and micromechanics. Yield criteria, flow, and hardening rules; Drucker's postulates, multiaxial theories, and boundary value problems. Rheological models; creep compliances and relaxation moduli; complex moduli; rheologically simple materials. Dislocation theories, crystal plasticity, Eshelby's solution for an inclusion, and mechanics of phase transformation. Prerequisite: 16:650:550 or 556.
16:650:652 Composite Materials, Fracture Mechanics, and Thermoelasticity (Solid Mechanics IV) (3) Composite materials: anisotropy, elastic constants, stress-strain averages, energy principles, bounds, and micromechanics models. Basic principles of fracture mechanics: mechanisms of fracture and crack growth, energy-release rates, complex stress functions, stress intensity, fracture criteria, mixed-mode fracture, and dynamic fracture. Thermoelasticity: linear-coupled theory, uncoupled theory, solution of selected applied problems involving heat and deformation, and application to composite and advanced materials. Prerequisites: 16:650:554, 556.
16:650:653 Structural Mechanics (Solid Mechanics V) (3) Review of plate theory. Foundations of shell theory. Variational calculus and energy theorems, stability, and buckling. Composite structures: anisotropic structures, laminated beams, plates and shells, and failure mechanisms. Prerequisites: 16:650:550, 554, and 556, or permission of instructor.
16:650:654 Dynamics of Solids and Structures (Solid Mechanics VI) (3) Review of multidegree of freedom vibration. Vibration of continuous systems: strings, beams, membranes, and plates. Vibration and waves. Waves in beams and plates. Bulk elastic waves. Reflection and transmission, Rayleigh surface waves, and ultrasonics. Additional topics, such as random vibration, as time permits. Prerequisites: Undergraduate course in mechanical vibration and 16:650:550, 554, and 556.
16:650:660 Computational Solid Mechanics (3) General theory, application of finite element methods to the solutions of the equations of elasticity, viscoelasticity, and plasticity. Two- and three-dimensional linear and nonlinear, static, and dynamic problems. Working computer programs. Prerequisite: 16:650:554.
16:650:661 Random Vibration (3) Continuous systems, exact, and approximate solutions; integral formulation; vibration under combined effects, inclusion principle, qualitative and quantitative behavior of the eigensolution, and computational techniques. Random vibration of nonlinear oscillators and Markov processes. Prerequisite: 16:650:654.
16:650:662 Advanced Stress Waves in Solids (3) Propagation of elastic waves in solids, reflection and transmission, Rayleigh waves, waves in plates, dispersion, radiation from a point load, and Fourier transforms methods; scattering; waves in anisotropic materials; propagation of discontinuities; and shocks. Prerequisite: 16:650:654.
16:650:663 Advanced Plasticity (3) Advanced theories and computational models in plasticity. Crystal plasticity for metallic systems based on dislocation theory and statistical mechanics. Sources of hardening for single and multiple glide conditions. Nucleation and growth of defects induced by plastic deformation. Large-strain constitutive relations for crystalline materials. Numerical implementation into finite element formulations. Prerequisite: 16:650:651.
16:650:664 Advanced Fracture Mechanics (3) Fracture mechanics; linear elastic, dynamic, and elastic-plastic methods and structures. Time-dependent fracture and fatigue crack growth for metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites. Mathematical methods in fracture mechanics; weight functions (3D), Green's functions (dislocation and point force), complex variable methods (2D), integral transforms, and applications of the FEM and BEM. Prerequisite: 16:650:652.
16:650:665 Advanced Composite Materials (3) Classification of anisotropy; elastic constants; particulate, fiber, and disc reinforcements; stress-strain average and energy principles; mean-field theory; self-consistent method; differential scheme; Hashin-Shtrikman's variational principles; bounding techniques; and viscoelastic, plastic, and viscoplastic composites. Prerequisite: 16:650:556.
16:650:666 Advanced Micromechanics (3) Origins of internal stress; Green's tensor function. Eshelby's solutions of ellipsoidal inclusions; stress concentration; crystal plasticity; continuous distribution of dislocations; single crystal versus polycrystal; Martensitic transformation in shape-memory alloys and ferroelectric ceramics. Prerequisite: 16:650:556 or 651.
16:650:667 Advanced Stability of Elastic Systems (3) Hamilton's principle; discrete and continuous systems; dynamical theories of beams and plates; nonlinear vibrations; Liapunov stability; limit cycles; and chaotic motion. Applications include the static and dynamic stability of thin-walled structures. Prerequisites: 16:650:554 and 556, 16:642:528.
16:650:668 Advanced Viscoelasticity (3) Basic rheological models and differential constitutive equations; Boltzman's superposition principle and hereditary integrals, Laplace transform; creep, relaxation, and complex moduli; discrete and continuous spectra; thermorheologically simple materials; glass transition temperature; William-Landel-Ferry (WLF) equation; chronorheologically simple and rheological complex materials; and physical aging. Prerequisite: 16:650:651.
16:650:669 Advanced Thermoelasticity (3) Formulation and solution of problems involving the effects of temperature on the elastic and inelastic behavior of materials and structures. Thermodynamics of deformation; heat transfer; thermoelasticity/thermoviscoelasticity. Prerequisite: 16:650:652.
16:650:670 Combustion (3) Fundamentals of combustion processes; premixed flames, diffusion flames, one-dimensional gas dynamics, and thermal explosion theory. Prerequisites: Undergraduate thermodynamics and fluid mechanics.
16:650:674 Radiation Heat Transfer (3) Theory of radiant heat transfer; characteristics of ideal and real systems; radiant energy exchange with and without a participating medium; analytical numerical experimental techniques; gray and nongray system analysis. Prerequisite: Undergraduate heat transfer.
16:650:678 Boiling and Condensation Heat Transfer (3) Detailed presentation of boiling and condensation heat transfer; nucleate boiling, transitional boiling, film boiling, film condensation, and dropwise condensation. Prerequisites: Undergraduate heat transfer and fluid mechanics.
16:650:682 Thermal Transport in Materials Processing (3) Transport phenomena in processes such as heat treatment, bonding, extrusion, casting, injection molding, crystal growing, metal forming, and plastic processing; analysis, mathematical modeling, and numerical simulation of such processes for design and optimization of the relevant systems. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
16:650:699 Nonthesis Study (N1)
16:650:701,702 Research in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (BA,BA) By arrangement with adviser.
 
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