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jeicher

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About jeicher

  • Birthday 06/08/1982

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  • Website URL
    http://www.lovehunterband.com

Profile Information

  • Location
    Cape Town, RSA
  • Interests
    music, reading, shooting, hiking, dnd(show me a scientist who hasn't played it ok!)
  • College Major/Degree
    Masters in Structural Biology
  • Favorite Area of Science
    Biochemistry
  • Occupation
    Student

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  • Lepton

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  1. Thanks for the warm welcome guys. eeek, looks like I'll have to elaborate a little to clear things up... I'm trying to model an object (assume for now that it has infinite compressive and tensile strength if that helps) colliding with a 1m thick reinforced concrete wall. i know the tensile strength of concrete without reinforcements is tiny (~3 MPa which is ~3E6 N/m2, I think) but with the steel it goes up significantly. This is obviously tricky to calculate because tensile strength is measured according to surface area and reinforced concrete has not only rods of steel but also a steel-mesh buried within it. Once that has been solved I'd like to start getting more specific about the projectile (eg. lead anvil --> human body). I just don't know where to start to include all these parameters in a mathematical model so any direction helps. Hope that helps a little...
  2. Was wondering if some of you physics kids could help me with a small problem... I need to know how to model the impact of a human body (or any projectile for that matter) on a reinforced concrete wall to be able to answer questions like: How much energy must be put into the action to generate enough force to push/throw something through a wall? How much damage will the wall/person take? Where does tensile strength enter the equation? etc.etc.etc.etc. I'd appreciate any help, thanks. -J Ps. Please bear in mind the fact that I'm a biochemist when you answer
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