Record

RefNoPP/17/17/1
Previous numbersPP/49/19
LevelItem
TitleManuscript, 'The rupture of steel by longitudinal stress' by Charles A [Ashley] Carus-Wilson
CreatorCarus-Wilson; Charles Ashley (1860-1942); British electrical engineer
Date1890
DescriptionCarus-Wilson writes: 'In a paper read before the Royal Society on June 16, 1881, Professor G H Darwin stated: “It is difficult to conceive any mode in which an elastic solid can rupture except by shearing, and hence it appears that the greatest shearing stress is a proper measure of the tendency to break” (‘Phil. Trans.,’ 1882, p. 99).'

Annotations in pencil and ink. Includes one page of diagrams and two photographs of ruptured steel.

Subject: Physics / Metallurgy

Received 10 March 1890. Read 27 March 1890. Communicated by George Howard Darwin.

A version of this paper was published in volume 49 of the Proceedings of the Royal Society as 'The rupture of steel by longitudinal stress'.
Extent26p
FormatManuscript
PhysicalDescriptionInk and graphite pencil on paper
Digital imagesView item on Science in the Making
AccessStatusOpen
RelatedMaterialDOI: 10.1098/rspl.1890.0090
Fellows associated with this archive
CodePersonNameDates
NA8198Darwin; Sir; George Howard (1845 - 1912); mathematician and geophysicist1845 - 1912
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