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The essence of knowledge is, having it, to apply it. Confucius (K'ung Fu-tse, about 551 B.C.479 B.C.)
EXCEL is the most popular spreadsheet for scientific, engineering and technical applications because of its powerful features and universal availability. EXCEL is a complete spreadsheet application that lets you analyze, organize, interpret, and present data quickly and easily. Engineering and science require imagination, insight, reasoning, and calculation. They mutually reinforce each other, so if you can get help with one of these things you have more than a 25 percent advantage at the start. This book will help you with the easiest one, calculation. The other three are up to you.
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Whats inside? 90 example workbooks on the CD, grouped by their chapters. Simple, straightforward explanations in text and graphics. All graphics in the chapters are in the workbooks on the CD, where they are displayed in color. How to do structured, efficient, documented workbook composition with data entry cells, summary results and statistics cells, and commented cells. Tips and tricks for using EXCEL for engineering and scientific applications. Pedagogical strategies to assist beginners. Emphasis on graphical presentation of data in standard technical formats. Web site for updates to the text and CD. Links to the Internet. Appendix 2 and the Bibliography are on the CD in HTML for access with your web browser. Clear explanations and comparisons of numerical differentiation methods and simple numerical integration techniques. Thorough treatment of Analysis ToolPak features useful in technology. Exercises to apply skills learned in each chapter. Applications of EXCELs matrix operations. Using EXCEL to import, analyze, and export data to a word processor. Inserting an active worksheet in a word processor. Including video clips and screen cam clips in a worksheet. Using EXCEL for automatic data acquisition and control of local and remote experiments. Using EXCEL with popular student lab hardware and software. Acquiring experimental data in EXCEL through the serial or parallel port without a data acquisition board. Acquiring experimental data in EXCEL through a USB port. A tutorial on using the Fast Fourier Transform in EXCEL. A tutorial on engineering and scientific applications of the Fast Fourier Transform using EXCELs functions and operators. Whats new in the Second Edition
! More workbooks to demonstrate EXCELs features. ! Frequently-asked questions (FAQs) with answers. ! More examples from across engineering and scientific disciplines.
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! Expanded explanations of integration methods. ! More matrix methods and examples. ! Added emphasis on documenting worksheets using Comment notes. ! More examples and explanations for solving differential equations. ! Use of new features in EXCEL 2002 (Microsoft OFFICE XP). Student laboratories have evolved from the read-the-meter format to computer-assisted data acquisition. EXCEL is ideal for laboratories at all levels because it is easy to use and it is installed on most computers. Most student software will export data to spreadsheets. PASCO Scientific (Science Workshop), National Instruments (LabVIEW and MEASURE), and Vernier Software (Multi-Purpose Laboratory Interface for Windows, Data Logger) have built-in analysis tools, but exporting the data to EXCEL gives the student and instructor more analysis power. EXCEL can not only acquire data and automate experiments, but it can generate signals and control experiments locally and worldwide, if desired, over the Internet. Some of the software mentioned above have the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) as part of their programs, but importing the raw data to EXCEL gives the student more flexibility, a feeling of being in control, and more of an appreciation for the process. In addition, spreadsheet graphs of publication quality and consistent format are easily included in laboratory reports composed on a word processor. This helps to develop personal communication skills.
Internet connections
The Internet is a great resource for engineers and scientists. Appendix 2 and the Bibliography make it easy for you to connect to useful information on the Internet. Just insert the CD that came with this book, open one of the HTML files and click on any web site of interest. EXCEL 2002 is intimately connected to the Internet, and it is easy to import data from Internet sites. You can also routinely collect data from remote experiments in laboratories, manufacturing facilities, and even spacecraft and other planets. If you need to replace the data often to keep it current the refreshable Web queries now available in EXCEL 2002 make that task easy. If you are connected to the Internet, just click on http://www.microsoft.com . This web site has free downloads from Microsoft.
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EXCEL 2002 can import workbooks composed using earlier versions of EXCEL and other spreadsheets such as Lotus 1-2-3 and Quattro. Turn on your computer and insert the CD that comes with this book. Start EXCEL and load a file of your choice. Youll find the most effective use of this book is when you work with it at your computer, and follow the discussion by exploring worksheets on your monitor as you read about them. This book is designed for a short course or as supplementary material for a longer course. Most of this book is for beginners and it does not cover every feature in EXCEL. A few sections and exercises, and the last two chapters, may appeal to more advanced students; these are marked with the symbol .
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Acknowledgements
It is a pleasure to acknowledge the assistance, guidance, and patience of the people at John Wiley & Sons. In alphabetical order, my thanks go to Mary Beth Bohman, Monique Calello, Jack Drucker, editor Joseph P. Hayton, Katherine Hepburn, Mary Moran, Kenneth Santor, Eric Shivak, and Lisa Van Horn. For the First Edition I am also pleased to acknowledge the assistance of Professors William Beckwith (Clemson University), Melanie Bengtson (North Dakota State University), Daniel A. Gulino (Ohio University) and Georg F. Mauer (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) in reviewing the manuscript. For the Second Edition I would like to thank Dr. Roy Fitzgerald Lpez Carrera, Professor Darrell G. Fontane (Colorado State University), Dr. Calvin Johnson, Professor Patrick J. Jordan (University of Canterbury, New Zealand), Professor J. C. Simonis (University of Texas-San Antonio), Professor Garry W. Warren (University of Alabama), and at John Wiley & Sons, Simon Durkin, Bonnie Kubat and Angie Vennerstrom. Again, special thanks go to editor Joseph P. Hayton. I am very grateful for the suggestions, comments, and encouragement from
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Dr. Lawrence Edward Bloch, Dr. Robert Dressler, Professor Donald T. Haynie (Louisiana Tech University), Curt Lorenc, and Janis Walters. Thanks also go to Dr. Daniel H. Fylstra of Frontline Systems (www.solver.com) for permission to include the Solver tutorials on the CD, National Instruments (www.ni.com), PASCO Scientific (www.pasco.com), and Vernier Software (www.vernier.com).
Contacts and Updates For information on related books, go to the web site:
http://www.wiley.com
For updates and new downloads for this book, go to the web site:
http://sylvanbloch.hypermart.net/ If you have suggestions or find a correction that is not listed, please send it to the e-mail address in the Contact section at the web site. Excel! Sylvan Charles Bloch Tampa, Florida
The science of calculation also is indispensable as far as the extraction of the square and cube roots; algebra as far as the quadratic equations; and the use of logarithms are often of value in ordinary cases; but all beyond these is but a luxury; a delicious luxury indeed; but not to be indulged in by one who is to have a profession to follow for his sustenance. Thomas Jefferson 1743 1826 Mathematics may be compared to a mill of exquisite workmanship which grinds you stuff of any degree of fineness; but, nevertheless, what you get out depends upon what you put in . . . Thomas Henry Huxley 1869
. . . when you can measure what you are speaking about and express it in numbers, you know something about it; but when you cannot measure it, when you cannot express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meager and unsatisfactory kind . . . Lord Kelvin in a lecture to the Institution of Civil Engineers, May 3, 1883
If engineers would read the manual, the world would be a better place. Andrew S. Grove CEO, Intel Corporation, 1999