# Last edited on 2013-02-06 21:06:27 by stolfilocal
[[File:Plastic_Protractor_Polarized_05375.jpg|240px|thumb|right|Built-in stress in a plastic [[protractor]] revealed by its [[photoelasticity|effect on polarized light]].]]
{{Infobox Physical quantity
|bgcolour={default}
|name=Stress
|image=[[File:Stress in a continuum.svg|400px]]
|caption=Figure 1.1 shows stress in a loaded deformable material body assumed as a continuum.
|unit=[[pascal (unit)|pascals]] (Pa)
|symbols=σ
|derivations=σ = [[force|F]] / [[area|A]]
}}
{{Continuum mechanics|cTopic=[[Solid mechanics]]}}
In [[continuum mechanics]], '''stress''' is a [[physical quantity]] that expresses the internal [[force]]s that neighboring [[particle]]s of a [[continuous medium|continuous material]] exert on each other. For example, when a [[solid]] vertical bar is supporting a [[weight]], each particle in the bar pulls on the particles immediately above and below it. When a [[liquid]] is under [[pressure]], each particle gets pushed inwards by all the surrounding particles, and, in [[reaction force|reaction]], pushes them outwards. These forces are actually the average of a very large number of [[intermolecular force]]s and [[atomic collision|collision]]s between the [[molecule]]s on both sides of .
Stress inside a body may arise by various mechanisms, such as reaction to external forces applied to the bulk material (like [[gravity]]) or to its surface (like [[contact force]]s, external pressure, or [[friction]]). Significant stress may exist even when deformation is negligible (as is often done when studying the flow of water) or non-existent. It may also be created directly, for example by [[thermal expansion|changes in temperature]] or [[chemistry|chemical]] composition, or by external [[electromagnetic field]]s (as in [[piezoelectricity|piezoelectric]] and [[magnetostriction|magnetostrictive]] materials).
Quantitatively, stress is defined as the force between adjacent parts of the material across an imaginary separating surface , divided by the area of that surface.[ In a [[fluid]] at rest the force is perpendicular to , and is the [[hydrostatic pressure|pressure]]. In a [[solid]], or in a [[flow]] of viscous [[liquid]], the stress may not be perpendicular to ; hence the stress across is a vector quantity, not a scalar. Moreover, its direction and magnitude generally depend on the orientation of . Thus the stress state of the material is a [[tensor]], called the [[Cauchy stress tensor|(Cauchy) stress tensor]]; which is a [[linear map|linear function]] that relates the [[surface normal|normal vector]] of a surface to the stress across . With respect to any chosen [[Cartesian coordinates|coordinate system]], the Cauchy stress tensor can be represented as a [[symmetric matrix|symmetric]] [[matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] of 3x3 real numbers. Even within a homogeneous body, the stress tensor may vary from place to place, and may change over time; therefore, the stress within a material is, in general, a time-varying [[tensor field]].
The relation between stress, deformation, and the [[strain rate tensor|rate of change of deformation]] can be quite complex, although a [[linear elasticity|linear approximation]] may be adequate in practice if the quantities are small enough.
In some branches of [[engineering]], the term "stress" is occasionally used in a looser sense as a synonym of "internal force". For example, in the analysis of [[truss]]es, it may refer to the total traction or compression force acting on a beam, rather than the force divided by the area of its [[cross-section]].
---> Compression, traction and shearing stress.
==Units of measure==
Each element of the Cauchy stress tensor is multiplied by one coordinate of the surface normal to yield a component of the stress across a surface. Since the surface normal coordinates are [[dimensionless]] numbers, the elements of too are measured in pressure units.
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== Definition ==
Consider an imaginary flat [[surface element]] separating two particles and , with [[surface normal|normal vector]] , directed from to . Let be the [[macroscopic]] force that exerts on across . The stress across is the force divided by the area of .][
Being a force per unit area, the stress on a surface element is [[dimensional analysis|dimensionally]] like the
The direction and magnitude of this vector generally depend on the orientation of the surface element . Thus, the stress state of the particle as a whole is neither a scalar nor a single a vector, but a [[function (mathematics)|function]] that relates the outwards-pointing [[surface normal|normal vector]] of a surface element to the stress on . By the laws of [[physics]], this function must be a [[linear map|linear function]] between the two vectors; that is a (second-order) [[tensor]], called the [[Cauchy stress tensor|(Cauchy) stress tensor]]. With respect to any chosen coordinate system, the stress tensor can be represented as a [[symmetric matrix|symmetric]] [[matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] of 3x3 real numbers. Even within a homogeneous body, the Cauchy stress tensor may vary from place to place, and may change over time; it is therefore a (time-varying) [[tensor field]].
Any [[deformation (mechanics)|strain (deformation)]] of a solid material generates an internal [[elastic stress]] that tends to restore the material to its original (undeformed) state. For fluids (liquids and [[gas]]es), only deformations that change the volume generate persistent elastic stress. However, if the deformation is gradually changing with time, even in fluids there will usually be some [[viscous stress]], opposing that change. On the other hand, stress may exist with negligible or no deformation: water, for example, can be assumed to be incompressible, yet its stress (hydrostatic pressure) can hardly be neglected.
The relation between stress, deformation, and the [[strain rate tensor|rate of change of deformation]] can be quite complex, although a [[linear elasticity|linear approximation]] may be adequate in practice if the quantities are small enough. Stress that exceeds certain [[strength of materials|strength limits]] of the material will result in permanent deformation (such as [[plasticity|plastic flow]],[[fracture]], [[cavitation]]) or even change of chemical state.
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Quantitatively, stress is defined by considering an imaginary flat [[surface element]] in the solid. Let be the force that the material on one side of applies directly on the material on the other side of , divided by the area of . In a [[fluid]] at rest the force is perpendicular to , and is the [[hydrostatic pressure|pressure]]. In a [[solid]], or in a [[flow]] of viscous [[liquid]], the stress may not be perpendicular to ; hence the stress across is a vector quantity, not a scalar. Moreover, its direction and magnitude generally depend on the orientation of . Thus the stress state of the material is a [[tensor]], called the [[Cauchy stress tensor|(Cauchy) stress tensor]]; which is a [[linear map|linear function]] that relates the [[surface normal|normal vector]] of a surface element to the stress across . With respect to any chosen [[Cartesian coordinates|coordinate system]], the Cauchy stress tensor can be represented as a [[symmetric matrix|symmetric]] [[matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] of 3x3 real numbers. Even within a homogeneous body, the stress tensor may vary from place to place, and may change over time; therefore, the stress within a material is, in general, a time-varying [[tensor field]].
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. In fact, the stress on the boundary of a particle may be directed into , away from , or parallel to its boundary, depending on which surface element we consider. Thus, the stress state of the particle as a whole is neither a scalar nor a single a vector, but a [[function (mathematics)|function]] that relates the outwards-pointing [[surface normal|normal vector]] of a surface element to the stress on . By the laws of [[physics]], this function must be a [[linear map|linear function]] between the two vectors; that is a (second-order) [[tensor]], called the [[Cauchy stress tensor|(Cauchy) stress tensor]]. With respect to any chosen coordinate system, the stress tensor can be represented as a [[symmetric matrix|symmetric]] [[matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] of 3x3 real numbers. Even within a homogeneous body, the Cauchy stress tensor may vary from place to place, and may change over time; it is therefore a (time-varying) [[tensor field]].
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Being a force per unit area, the stress on a surface element is [[dimensional analysis|dimensionally]] like the [[hydrostatic pressure|pressure]] within a [[fluid]]. However, in many materials—including solids and flowing [[viscosity|viscous]] [[fluid]]s—the force may not be perpendicular to . Therefore, the stress across a surface element is a [[vector]] quantity, not a simple [[scalar (mathematics)]] like pressure.
Moreover, the
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a [[function (mathematics)|function]] that relates the outwards-pointing [[surface normal|normal vector]] of a surface element centered on to the stress on . By the laws of [[physics]], this function must be a [[linear map|linear function]] between the two vectors; that is a (second-order) [[tensor]], called the [[Cauchy stress tensor|(Cauchy) stress tensor]] of the material at that point. With respect to any chosen coordinate system, the stress tensor can be represented as a [[symmetric matrix|symmetric]] [[matrix (mathematics)|matrix]] of 3x3 real numbers. Even within a homogeneous body, the Cauchy stress tensor may vary from place to place, and may change over time; therefore, the stress within a material is a [[tensor field]], often varying with time.
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Like other concepts of continuum mechanics, stress is a [[macroscopic]] concept. Namely, the particles considered in its definition and analysis should be just small enough to be treated as homogeneous in composition and state, but still large enough to ignore [[quantum mechanics|quantum]] effects and the detailed motions of molecules (and, depending on the context, other microscopic features like the grains of a [[metal]] rod or the [[fiber]]s of [[wood]]). Thus the stress across a surface element is actually the average of a very large number of forces and collisions between the molecules on both sides of .
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Any symmetric 3×3 matrix has three [[eigenvector]]s with real [[eigenvalue]]s. Therefore, at any instant and any point in the medium, there are three mutually orthogonal directions (unit-length vectors) , , and such that the stress across a surface element ]