Image | |
EAN-13 | 9780471186366 |
Product Name | Explosives Engineering |
Category | Book / Magazine / Publication |
Short Description | Hardcover |
Amazon.com | Buy on Amazon ~ 0471186368 |
Price New | 158.64 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Price Used | 150.51 US Dollars (curriencies) |
Width | 1.2 inches (convert) |
Height | 9.2 inches (convert) |
Length | 6.2 inches (convert) |
Weight | 29.6 ounces (convert) |
Author | Paul Cooper |
Page Count | 480 |
Binding | Hardcover |
Published | 11/28/1996 |
Long Description | This graduate text, and Cooper's companion introductory text ('Introduction to the Technology of Explosives'), serve the same markets as the successful explosives reference by Meyer, now in its 4th edition. VCH also published the International Journal of Propellants, Explosives, and Pyrotechnics. The resulting package would give VCH the major presence in the field. This text presents the basic technologies used in the engineering of explosives and explosive systems, i.e., chemistry, burning, detonation, shock waves, initiation theories, scaling. The book is written for upper-division undergraduate or graduate-level scientists and engineers, and assumes a good grasp of basic physics, chemistry, mechanics and mathematic through calculus. It is based on lecture notes used for graduate courses at the Dept. of Energy Laboratories, and could serve as a core text for a course at schools of mining or military engineering. The intent of the book is to provide the engineer or scientist in the field with an understanding of the phenomena involved and the engineering tools needed to solve/ design/ analyze a broad range of real problems. |
Similar Items | 9780471613978: Aircraft Control And Simulation 9780471582625: Dynamic Behavior Of Materials 9780471371458: Aircraft Control And Simulation 9780471186359: Introduction To The Technology Of Explosives 9780470547564: Control Systems Engineering 9780470029671: Organic Chemistry Of Explosives 9780387955582: Explosive Effects And Applications (Shock Wave And High Pressure Phenomena) 9780387787466: Image Correlation for Shape, Motion and Deformation Measurements: Basic Concepts,Theory and Applications 9780226069685: The Department (Phoenix fiction) 9780138954833: Control Systems Engineering View 32 more similar items |
Created | 02-26-2012 9:06:01pm |
Modified | 04-30-2020 8:56:59pm |
MD5 | 117b834d000d311ad6b422edd851d213 |
SHA256 | b262d8e4aa20636010803a30033e3ab5f6a91bfc7f82f58723bdc59258ac8b56 |
Search Google | by EAN or by Title |
Query Time | 0.0268390 |
An article of interest
The Main EANData blog
Code39 Barcodes
Code39 also known as Code 3 of 9 allows you to encode text using characters A-Z and 0-9 and some punctuation. Using an extended encoding system, it is possible to encode the entire ASCII character set.
Each character is made up of 10 elements where 5 are bars and 5 are spaces. You may have seen this described as 9 elements on other sites where 5 are bars and 4 are spaces but there is always a narrow space stripe between characters which means we might as well consider that trailing narrow space part of each character making the total number of elements 10. The final trailing narrow space simply appears to be absorbed into the quiet zone to the right of the final barcode. There is no check digit in this symbology unlike others. The variation between the width of the bars is what define the value of each character.
In the image below you will notice the start and stop block are the same. In most Code39 fonts,this is encoded as the asterisk (*) character although may or may not be displayed under the barcode. The text under the barcode is optional and is for human use only. The start and stop asterisks are not decoded when scanned and may or maynot bedisplayed. Also how the text is displayed depends on the process used to create the barcodes. Often, the text is simply under the barcode without the indent displayed in our sample.
Normally, there are only 43 characters that can be encoded using Code39. But if you want to encode the full ASCII characterset, you can prefix letters with special characters to get the characters you need including lower case and special characters. Although it is possible to encode the full ASCII set, if you actually need to do this it is better to use Code128 because it will produce a smaller barcode.
If you want to create your own Code39 barcode, you can visit our very own barcode generator page.