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Page Title: Chapter 2 Engineering Fundamentals
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ATOMS

CHAPTER  2 ENGINEERING FUNDAMENTALS You are about to become acquainted with the fascinating  world  of  PHYSICS.  You  will  learn about the various natural and physical laws and phenomena.   Physics   is   concerned   with   those aspects   of   nature   which   can   be   understood in  a  fundamental  way  in  terms  of  elementary principles and laws. The forces of physics and the laws  of  nature  are  at  work  in  every  piece  of machinery  and  equipment.  It  is  by  these  forces and  laws  that  the  machinery  and  equipment produce   work. In  the  following  paragraphs  you  will  learn about   matter,   magnetism,   electricity,   motion, properties  of  mass,  temperature,  pressure,  various laws  and  principles  of  physics  dealing  with motion,  gases,  hydraulics  and  pneumatics,  and basic information on metals. After studying this chapter,  you  will  have  the  fundamental,  basic knowledge  to  understand  what  electrical  and mechanical  devices  are  all  about  and  how  they work. MATTER If western science has roots, they probably lie in   the   rubble   that   was   once   ancient   Greece. Except for the Greeks, ancient people had little interest  in  the  structure  of  materials.  They accepted a solid as being just that—a continuous, uninterrupted  substance.  One  Greek  school  of thought  believed  that  if  a  piece  of  matter,  such as  copper,  were  subdivided,  it  could  be  subdivided indefinitely and still only that material would be found. Others reasoned that a limit exists to the number of subdivisions that could be made and have  the  material  still  retain  its  original characteristics.  They  held  fast  to  the  idea  that all  substances  are  built  upon  a  basic  particle. Experiments have revealed that, indeed, several basic particles, or building blocks, are within all substances. Matter cannot be created nor destroyed. This law  holds  within  the  experimental  error  of  the most  precise  chemical  reactions.  This  theory  of the conservation of energy will be discussed later in this chapter. Matter is defined as anything that occupies  space  and  has  weight;  that  is,  the  weight and dimensions of matter that can be measured. Examples of matter are air, water, clothing, and even  our  own  bodies.  So,  we  can  say  matter  is found  in  any  one  of  three  states:  GASEOUS, LIQUID,   and   SOLID. In the following paragraphs we will describe how  substances  are  classified  as  elements  and compounds  and  how  they  are  made  up  of molecules  and  atoms.  We  will  then  learn  about protons, electrons, and the physics of electricity. ELEMENTS  AND  COMPOUNDS An  element  is  a  substance  that  cannot  be reduced to a simpler substance by chemical means. Examples of elements with which you are in every day  contact  are  iron,  gold,  silver,  copper,  and oxygen. Over 100 known elements are in existence. All  the  different  substances  we  know  about  are composed  of  one  or  more  of  these  elements. When  two  or  more  elements  are  chemically combined,  the  resulting  substance  is  called  a COMPOUND.   A   compound   is   a   chemical combination  of  elements  that  can  be  separated by   chemical   means. Examples   of   common compounds are water, which consists of hydrogen and  oxygen,  and  table  salt,  which  consists  of sodium and chlorine. A MIXTURE, on the other hand,   is   a   combination   of   elements   and compounds,  not  chemically  combined,  that  can be  separated  by  physical  means.  Examples  of mixtures are air, which is made up of nitrogen, oxygen,  carbon  dioxide,  and  small  amounts  of rare gases, and sea water, which consists chiefly of  salt  and  water. MOLECULES A  MOLECULE  is  a  chemical  combination  of two  or  more  atoms,  (atoms  are  described  in  the 2-1

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