The study of wave propagation seems very remote to many engineers, even
to those who are involved in structural dynamics. I think one of the
reasons for this is that the examples usually taught in school were
either so simple as to be inapplicable to real world problems, or so
mathematically abstruse as to be intractable. This book contains an
approach, spectral analysis, that I have found to be very effective in
analyzing waves. What has struck me most about this approach is how I
can use the same analytic framework to do predictions as well as to
manipulate experimental data. As an experimentalist, I had found it very
frustrating having my analytical tools incompatible with my experiments.
For example, it is experimentally impos- sible to generate a
step-function wave and yet that is the type of analytical solution
available. Spectral analysis is very encompassing - it touches on
analysis, numerical meth- ods, and experimental methods. I wanted this
book to do justice to its versatility, so many subjects are introduced.
As a result some areas may seem a little thin and I regret this. But I
do hope, nonetheless, that the bigger picture, the unity, comes across.
To encourage you to try the spectral analysis approach I have included
complete source code listings to some of the computer programs mentioned
in the text.