Good explanation thanks. Only improvement I can suggest is to raise the master volume before you export to youtube - my volume is all the way up, and I am still having some trouble hearing.
Awesome explanation as usual, simple and to the point. However there is something I am unsure of, when you apply a stress to a viscoelastic material, shouldn't the material have an instantaneous elastic response which is then followed by creep? I am now a bit confused! T Thanks!
Excellent video. At 7.05 you said "apply a strain " . How do you apply a strain. Do you mean apply a force/ stress and strain is a result. Was is it a mistake or iam understanding it wrong. Please explain. I appreciate your efforts. Thanks
Hi, I have an engineering and human movement question. I’m a physical therapist and I’d love to ask you a few questions about certain engineering principles in regards to the human anatomy. If possible and intrigued, please message me! Thank you
I am researching the viscoelastic behavior of human muscle, and let me just say that this video is pure gold. Thank you.
This is such a gold quality video explanation! You are amazing Professor! Thx a lot!
9 years later you are helping me. thanks man
Thanks a lot from Germany!
that was the best explanation about visco-stuff. Finally I undertood it !! excellent video
and you are the best professor i've ever known. Thank you for posting such videos
Thanks man for the clear explanation. All the way from New Zealand :)
Fantastic video, needed this for my injuries and muscle movement class, struggled to get the concept of viscoelasticity. Video helped alot, thanks!
You're the man, great explanation.
Good explanation thanks. Only improvement I can suggest is to raise the master volume before you export to youtube - my volume is all the way up, and I am still having some trouble hearing.
This helped me a lot for my dental materials class! Thanks a ton!
Great video, many thanks.
Excellent video, thanks for that!
@hurshasnarayan Thanks Hursha! It was a good gig there, but I just love being a professor.
Thank you for this!
thank you so much for the video!
9:10 is this called hysteresis?
Thank you very much
great Explanation.
We miss you at Bosch.
Hursha
thank you so much
Great video thanks
purdueMET isn't the silly-putty an example of viscoplasticity? Because the strain doesn't go away even after you remove the load, right?
Awesome explanation as usual, simple and to the point. However there is something I am unsure of, when you apply a stress to a viscoelastic material, shouldn't the material have an instantaneous elastic response which is then followed by creep? I am now a bit confused! T
Thanks!
WOW !!!! thank you so much
fabulous! thanx
Can a viscoelastic material go back to its initial shape after the apply force is removed
Excellent video.
At 7.05 you said "apply a strain " . How do you apply a strain. Do you mean apply a force/ stress and strain is a result. Was is it a mistake or iam understanding it wrong. Please explain. I appreciate your efforts. Thanks
Hi, I have an engineering and human movement question. I’m a physical therapist and I’d love to ask you a few questions about certain engineering principles in regards to the human anatomy. If possible and intrigued, please message me! Thank you
Nice video. I have question that does viscoelastic mean non-Newtonian? For example, is viscoelastic fluid same to non-Newtonian fluid?
Heard this word in The Flash and came to see if they used it correctly 😂
examples were more confusing than helping
Because he was using a viscoplastic example unfortunately.