Introduction to Biomedical EngineeringPearson/Prentice Hall, 2004 - 244 sider For freshman and limited calculus-based courses in Introduction to Biomedical Engineering or Introduction to Bioengineering. This text presents freshman-level students with a study of some of the best engineering designs provided by nature and exposes them to bioengineering practice from a variety of perspectives. Examining the living system from the molecular to the the human scale, this text covers such key issues as optimization, scaling, and design; and introduces these concepts in a sequential, layered manner. Analysis strategies, science, and technology are illustrated in each chapter. |
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Side 61
... Heat When a calorie of energy is put into a gram of water , the temperature rises . The ad- dition of more heat will continue to raise the water's temperature until the boiling point is reached . At this point , the temperature rise ...
... Heat When a calorie of energy is put into a gram of water , the temperature rises . The ad- dition of more heat will continue to raise the water's temperature until the boiling point is reached . At this point , the temperature rise ...
Side 62
... heat release ( q ) . In any accounting system , a sign convention is needed to distinguish a debit from a deposit . W and Q will be regarded as positive if the system performs work and heat is released to the environment . Let us now ...
... heat release ( q ) . In any accounting system , a sign convention is needed to distinguish a debit from a deposit . W and Q will be regarded as positive if the system performs work and heat is released to the environment . Let us now ...
Side 63
... heat production can be a problem in the summer , as anyone who has suffered from heat exhaustion can attest . As Chapter 3 introduced , homeostatic mechanisms attempt to retain or dissi- pate waste heat in order to maintain the body ...
... heat production can be a problem in the summer , as anyone who has suffered from heat exhaustion can attest . As Chapter 3 introduced , homeostatic mechanisms attempt to retain or dissi- pate waste heat in order to maintain the body ...
Indhold
What is Bioengineering? | 3 |
Cellular Elemental and Molecular Building Blocks | 16 |
Mass Conservation Cycling and Kinetics | 33 |
Copyright | |
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