Physics With Illustrative Examples From Medicine and Biology: MechanicsSpringer Science & Business Media, 2000 M06 9 - 549 pages A reissue of a classic book, corrected, edited, and typeset, to be published in the Biological Physics Series. Intended for undergraduate courses in biophysics, biological physics, physiology, medical physics, and biomedical engineering, this book is an introduction to mechanics with examples and problems from the medical and biological sciences. The book covers standard topics of kinematics, dynamics,statics, momentum, and feeedback, control and stability but with emphasis on physical and biological systems. Chapters include problems and references. The book can be used as a supplement to standard introductory physics courses, and as a text for medical schools, medical physics courses, and biology departments. The three volumes combined present all the major topics in physics. Originally published in 1974 from the authors's typescript, this reissue will be edited, corrected, typeset, the art redrawn, and an index added. These books are being reissued by Springer in the Biological Physics Series in response to frequent requests to provide these texts to satisfy the growing need among students and practitioners in the medical and biological sciences with a working knowledge of the physical sciences. The books are also in demand in physics departments either as supplements to traditional intro texts or as main text for those departments offering courses with biological or medical physics orientation. A solutions manual will be available. The authors are recognized experts in the field, and are under contract for an upperlevel/grad text in biological physics. Benedeck was the recepient of the 1995 Irving Lanmuir Prize from the American Physical Society for Chemical Physics, and the 1994 Biological Physics Prize by the American Physical Society. |
Contents
Kinematics | 1 |
Dynamics | 44 |
Static Equilibrium and the Forces Acting on Muscles | 112 |
Hip Joint | 133 |
Pressure with Height | 191 |
iii Buoyant Force on Bodies Immersed in a Fluid | 199 |
iii Oxygen Storage and Delivery by the Blood | 219 |
Other editions - View all
Physics With Illustrative Examples From Medicine and Biology: Statistical ... George B. Benedek,Felix M.H. Villars No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
acceleration amount angle angular applied associated assume beam bending blood body called center of mass components compute condition conservation consider constant control system course depends determine diagram difference direction discussion distance effect energy engine equal equation equilibrium example exerted expression fact falls Figure final flow fluid forces acting function given gives glucose gravity heart heat horizontal impact important increase initial integral kinetic energy length load magnitude mathematical maximum means measured mechanical momentum motion moves muscle needed normal observe obtain occurs oscillation output oxygen particle pendulum period physical position potential energy present pressure problem produced proportional quantity response result shown simply speed steam stress surface Table temperature torque turn unit vector velocity vertical volume weight write zero