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Ecological Mechanics
A01=Mark Denny
Acceleration
Action potential
Adhesive
Amplitude
Author_Mark Denny
Available energy (particle collision)
Bernoulli's principle
Boundary layer
Buoyancy
Calculation
Cantilever
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Coefficient
Convection
Dashpot
Decompression sickness
Deformation (engineering)
Drag coefficient
Ecology
Eddy (fluid dynamics)
Enthalpy of vaporization
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Evaporation
Evaporative cooling (atomic physics)
Fracture mechanics
Fragility
Frequency response
Heat
Heat transfer
Hooke's law
Infinitesimal strain theory
Kalman filter
Kinetic energy
Limpet
Mean free path
Measurement
Metabolism
Molecule
Mussel
Natural frequency
Normal distribution
Nutrient
Organism
Oscillation
Pattern formation
Phytoplankton
Poisson's ratio
Polymer
Power law
Prediction
Probability
Quantity
Resonance
Reynolds number
Seaweed
Shear modulus
Shear stress
Solid surface
Stiffness
Strain energy
Stress concentration
Surface area
Surface energy
Surface tension
Temperature
Tenacity (mineralogy)
Thermoregulation
Toughness
Turbulent diffusion
Ultimate tensile strength
Van der Waals force
Velocity gradient
Viscosity
Product details
- ISBN 9780691163154
- Weight: 1247g
- Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
- Publication Date: 29 Dec 2015
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Plants and animals interact with each other and their surroundings, and these interactions--with all their complexity and contingency--control where species can survive and reproduce. In this comprehensive and groundbreaking introduction to the emerging field of ecological mechanics, Mark Denny explains how the principles of physics and engineering can be used to understand the intricacies of these remarkable relationships. Denny opens with a brief review of basic physics before introducing the fundamentals of diffusion, fluid mechanics, solid mechanics, and heat transfer, taking care to explain each in the context of living organisms. Why are corals of different shapes on different parts of a reef? How can geckos climb sheer walls? Why can birds and fish migrate farther than mammals? How do desert plants stay cool? The answers to these and a host of similar questions illustrate the principles of heat, mass, and momentum transport and set the stage for the book's central topic--the application of these principles in ecology. Denny shows how variations in the environment--in both space and time--affect the performance of plants and animals.
He introduces spectral analysis, a mathematical tool for quantifying the patterns in which environments vary, and uses it to analyze such subjects as the spread of invasive species. Synthesizing the book's materials, the final chapters use ecological mechanics to predict the occurrence and consequences of extreme ecological events, explain the emergence of patterns in the distribution and abundance of organisms, and empower readers to explore further. Ecological Mechanics offers new insights into the physical workings of organisms and their environment.
Mark Denny is the John B. and Jean DeNault Professor of Marine Sciences at Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, California. His books include Biology and the Mechanics of the Wave-Swept Environment, Air and Water, and How the Ocean Works.
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