Editorial for the Launching of Dynamics
- The first and probably most important step in this direction is the understanding of nature’s laws, as well as the knowledge that they are perfectly dependable. This is called science.
- Another important step is that we have learned as intelligent beings how to use the laws of nature to build our own systems in order to perform various tasks. This is called engineering.
- The third step, which is directly related to the previous one, is that we have learned to predict the dynamic behavior of systems that have not yet been built. This is called dynamic analysis. This step is very important due to the fact that it is the key to investigating the proper function of the proposed systems under different conditions and environments. With this in mind, the dynamic behavior of large, complex systems is found to be made up of elementary behavior patterns, which can be discerned and studied one by one. The process of discernment can be accomplished by a repeated application of relatively elementary analytical techniques.
- The specifications of the system to be studied and the visualization of a simple physical model, in which behavior will match sufficiently close to the behavior of the real system, are considered.
- The design of a mathematical model that represents the physical model, which involves the writing of the differential equations of motion of the physical model.
- The study of the dynamic behavior of the mathematical model by solving the differential equations of motion. With the term motion, the change of any physical variable, such as velocity, voltage or current, temperature, etc., is meant.
- The writing of design decisions, such as the choice of the physical parameters of the system in order for it to behave as desired, is the last step of this procedure.
- Aerodynamics
- Analytical dynamics
- Biological physics and networks
- Brownian dynamics
- Chaos, nonlinear dynamics, and applications
- Chemical reactions dynamics
- Celestial mechanics
- Climate dynamics
- Complex systems and complexity
- Dynamics of atomic and molecular systems
- Electronic and structural dynamics
- Fluid dynamics
- File dynamics
- Fractional dynamics and applications
- Gas dynamics
- Magnetohydrodynamics, turbulence, and plasmas
- Langevin dynamics
- Laser optics
- Multi-scale/multi-physics dynamics
- Nonholonomic mechanics
- Quantum mechanics and electrodynamics
- Relativistic dynamics
- Stability, control, and synchronization
- Soil dynamics
- Thermodynamics
- Vortex dynamics
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Cannon, R.H. Dynamics of Physical Systems; Courier Corporation: Chelmsford, MA, USA, 2003. [Google Scholar]
Short Biography of Author
| Christos Volos obtained a Ph.D. in the field of “Nonlinear Circuits” in 2008 from the Physics Department, of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece). In 2010, he joined the Laboratory of Electronics and Telecommunications of the Greek Army Academy. Four years later, he joined, as a lecturer, the Physics Department of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He currently serves as an Associate Professor in the same department. Additionally, since 2016 he has been a member of the Laboratory of Nonlinear Systems, Circuits & Complexity (LaNSCom) and he has worked on a large number of Greek or European funded research projects dealing with nonlinear systems and their applications. His research interests include, among others, the study of nonlinear chaotic systems, the design of analog and mixed-signal electronic circuits, chaotic electronics and their applications (secure communications, cryptography, robotics), experimental chaotic synchronization, chaotic UWB communications, as well as measurement and instrumentation systems. Dr. Volos has authored or co-authored of more than 280 papers published in journals, book chapters, and proceedings in international and national conferences. He is also a co-author of one book, editor or co-editor of nine other books, member of the editorial board of seven scientific journals related to systems, as well as he has served as a guest editor in more than 20 special issues of international scientific journals. |
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Volos, C. Editorial for the Launching of Dynamics. Dynamics 2021, 1, 18-21. https://doi.org/10.3390/dynamics1010003
Volos C. Editorial for the Launching of Dynamics. Dynamics. 2021; 1(1):18-21. https://doi.org/10.3390/dynamics1010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleVolos, Christos. 2021. "Editorial for the Launching of Dynamics" Dynamics 1, no. 1: 18-21. https://doi.org/10.3390/dynamics1010003
APA StyleVolos, C. (2021). Editorial for the Launching of Dynamics. Dynamics, 1(1), 18-21. https://doi.org/10.3390/dynamics1010003