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Intro to Fluid Mechanics for Engineering Students Part 2


Srbija

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Intro to Fluid Mechanics for Engineering Students Part 2
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + .srt | Duration: 15 lectures (3h 37m) | Size: 3.5 GB

Reynolds Transport Theorem, Conservation of Mass, Linear Momentum, Bernoulli's Equation and more

What you'll learn:
Reynolds Transport Theorem & Conservation of Mass
Linear Momentum & Bernoulli Equation
Stagnation, Static, and Dynamic Pressures

Requirements
Intro to Fluid Mechanics for Engineering Students Part 1
Calculus & Differential Equations
Knowledge of Free Body Diagrams


Description
Are you tired of struggling in your Fluids class?

If you answered yes, then this course is for you! Here you'll find easy to understand lectures and plenty of fully-worked examples to help you learn the challenging subject of Fluid Mechanics.

This course is the second in a 3-course series designed to teach the fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics. In this section, we dive into the world of fluid in motion... this is where it starts getting good!

Here's what we'll cover

This course covers the following topics that are generally found in a university-level Intro to Fluids class:

Reynolds Transport Theorem

Conservation of Mass

Volumetric Flow

Linear Momentum Equation

Bernoulli Equation

Stagnation, Static, and Dynamic Pressures

And more!

Here's what you get when you enroll

Lifetime access to the course

Easy to follow, on-demand lecture videos

Plenty of fully-worked examples in a variety of difficulty levels

Downloadable outline of notes to help you create an organized set of notes and to help you follow along

What's the format of the course?

Let me just say that I hate engineering courses taught with PowerPoint slides. Due to this, you will not find slides here.

I think people learn better when they have to write the material. That means the majority of my lectures are handwritten. I give you a brief outline of notes to help you follow along and to help minimize the length of the videos.

Speaking of video length... am I the only one who doesn't like watching hour-long lecture videos? I didn't think so.

To eliminate that frustration my lectures are broken up into shorter segments, typically 12-15 minutes.

And if you are here for examples, I made them easy to find. Almost all the examples are in their own videos, that way you can look through the notes and pick and choose which ones you want to watch.

Who this course is for
Students currently enrolled in a university-level Fluids course
Engineers studying for the Fundamentals of Engineering exam

Homepage

 

http://anonymz.com/?https://www.udemy.com/course/fluid-mechanics-for-engineering-students-part-2/

 


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https://rapidgator.net/file/8d1cebf2a69794e9f0df5b9e1bcb1bb4/Intro_to_Fluid_Mechanics_for_Engineering_Students_Part_2.part1.rar.html
https://rapidgator.net/file/197d796aa6d97887fe828490d17dc86c/Intro_to_Fluid_Mechanics_for_Engineering_Students_Part_2.part2.rar.html
https://rapidgator.net/file/e22c3ce664bfe25c2f2699b503c3a243/Intro_to_Fluid_Mechanics_for_Engineering_Students_Part_2.part3.rar.html
https://rapidgator.net/file/4eb9dfe5a224519ce8748c229d4e145f/Intro_to_Fluid_Mechanics_for_Engineering_Students_Part_2.part4.rar.html

 

 

Edited by Bad Karma
Dead links removed

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