No going back
No going back
No going back
this assumes a ductile material. I myself am smiling as though everything is fine in the elastic region and may snap at any moment.
What a fragile personality...
brittle. brittle materials fail in the elastic portion of the stress strain diagram
Found the titanium personality
Can a TI-84slinger explain this for us pipette-wielders?
Past the elastic deformation region / yield stress you get plastic deformation, which even when the stress is completely removed there is permanent deformation.
Everything past the dotted line is the point where the material won't go back to its original shape.
Example: You can push on the hood of your car all you want, it'll flex, and go back to its original shape (elastic deformation); but stand on it, and it'll dent (plastic deformation).
"have you tried modeling this with something more flexible?" -The Project Manager.
Manager "So all that you need is more strain to reduce the stress? Here are 10 more tasks which should strain you quite a bit"
Have considered recrystallisation therapy
The plastic zone is no joke, my friend.
Is it sort of like the friend zone?
Indeed, it leaves you forever deformed.
The material is too ductile. I am at the peak of a narrow yield curve and then, snap, material breaks.
I like plastic.
Well, do we have some good news for you about what's currently in your body...
Yeah when I jerk off I cum credit cards.
Ouch yes, very true, but ouch
Well, mom, maybe write like a 60-year-old and not a 14-year-old and I'll respond.
Ah yes the part of the curve where the stress permanently changes you. Yeah, accurate.