GATE 2010: Syllabus For Mechanical Engineering

by Vivek on August 23, 2009


Below you can see the syllabus of gate 2010 of Mechanical Branch. Study well according to this syllabus and score good marks in the exam.

ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS

> Linear Algebra

Matrix algebra, Systems of linear equations, Eigen values and eigen vectors.

> Calculus

Functions of single variable, Limit, continuity and differentiability, Mean value theorems, Evaluation of definite and improper integrals, Partial derivatives, Total derivative, Maxima and minima, Gradient, Divergence and Curl, Vector identities, Directional derivatives, Line, Surface and volume Integrals, Strokes Gauss and Green’s theorems.

> Differential equations

First order equations (linear and nonlinear), Higher order linear differential equations with constant coefficients, Cauchy’s and Euler’s equations, Initial and boundary value problems, Laplace transforms, Solutions of one dimensional heat and wave equations and Laplace equation.

> Complex variables

Analytic functions, Cauchy’s integral theorem, Taylor and Laurent series.

> Probability and Statistics

Definitions of probability and sampling theorems, Conditional probability, Mean, median, mode and standard deviation, Random variables, Poisson, Normal and Binomial distributions.

> Numerical Methods

Numerical solutions of linear and non-linear algebraic equations Integration by trapezoidal and Simpson’s rule, single and multi-step methods for differential equations.

APPLIED MECHANICS AND DESIGN

> Engineering Mechanics

Free body diagrams and equilibrium; trusses and frames; virtual work; kinematics and dynamics of particles and of rigid bodies in plane motion, including impulse and momentum (linear and angular) and energy formulations; impact.

> Strength of Materials

Stress and strain, stress-strain relationship and elastic constants, Mohr’s circle for plane stress and plane strain, thin cylinders; shear force and bending moment diagrams; bending and shear stresses; deflection of beams; torsion of circular shafts; Euler?s theory of columns; strain energy methods; thermal stresses.

> Theory of Machines

Displacement, velocity and acceleration analysis of plane mechanisms; dynamic analysis of slider-crank mechanism; gear trains; flywheels.

> Vibrations

Free and forced vibration of single degree of freedom systems; effect of damping; vibration isolation; resonance, critical speeds of shafts.

> Design

Design for static and dynamic loading; failure theories; fatigue strength and the S-N diagram; principles of the design of machine elements such as bolted, riveted and welded joints, shafts, spur gears, rolling and sliding contact bearings, brakes and clutches.

FLUID MECHANICS AND THERMAL SCIENCES

> Fluid Mechanics

Fluid properties; fluid statics, manometry, buoyancy; control-volume analysis of mass, momentum and energy; fluid acceleration; differential equations of continuity and momentum; Bernoulli’s equation; viscous flow of incompressible fluids; boundary layer; elementary turbulent flow; flow through pipes, head losses in pipes, bends etc.

> Heat-Transfer

Modes of heat transfer; one dimensional heat conduction, resistance concept, electrical analogy, unsteady heat conduction, fins; dimensionless parameters in free and forced convective heat transfer, various correlations for heat transfer in flow over flat plates and through pipes; thermal boundary layer; effect of turbulence; radiative heat transfer, black and grey surfaces, shape factors, network analysis; heat exchanger performance, LMTD and NTU methods.

> Thermodynamics

Zeroth, First and Second laws of thermodynamics; thermodynamic system and processes; Carnot cycle. irreversibility and availability; behaviour of ideal and real gases, properties of pure substances, calculation of work and heat in ideal processes; analysis of thermodynamic cycles related to energy conversion.

> Applications

Power Engineering: Steam Tables, Rankine, Brayton cycles with regeneration and reheat. I.C. Engines: air-standard Otto, Diesel cycles. Refrigeration and air-conditioning: Vapour refrigeration cycle, heat pumps, gas refrigeration, Reverse Brayton cycle; moist air: psychrometric chart, basic psychrometric processes. Turbomachinery: Pelton-wheel, Francis and Kaplan turbines – impulse and reaction principles, velocity diagrams.

MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING

> Engineering Materials

Structure and properties of engineering materials, heat treatment, stress-strain diagrams for engineering materials.

> Metal Casting

Design of patterns, moulds and cores; solidification and cooling; riser and gating design, design considerations.

> Forming

Plastic deformation and yield criteria; fundamentals of hot and cold working processes; load estimation for bulk (forging, rolling, extrusion, drawing) and sheet (shearing, deep drawing, bending) metal forming processes; principles of powder metallurgy.

> Joining

Physics of welding, brazing and soldering; adhesive bonding; design considerations in welding.

> Machining and Machine Tool Operations

Mechanics of machining, single and multi-point cutting tools, tool geometry and materials, tool life and wear; economics of machining; principles of non-traditional machining processes; principles of work holding, principles of design of jigs and fixtures

> Metrology and Inspection

Limits, fits and tolerances; linear and angular measurements; comparators; gauge design; interferometry; form and finish measurement; alignment and testing methods; tolerance analysis in manufacturing and assembly.

> Computer Integrated Manufacturing

Basic concepts of CAD/CAM and their integration tools.

> Production Planning and Control

Forecasting models, aggregate production planning, scheduling, materials requirement planning.

> Inventory Control

Deterministic and probabilistic models; safety stock inventory control systems.

> Operations Research

Linear programming, simplex and duplex method, transportation, assignment, network flow models, simple queuing models, PERT and CPM.

You can download the syllabus in pdf  form from the link below:

Download Link: http://depositfiles.com/files/47lurtwtc

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

kalai October 6, 2009 at 18:42

syllabus

Reply

Vivek October 6, 2009 at 19:50

what do you want to ask
specify your problem

Reply

subho October 4, 2009 at 13:38

i want 2 know about num. of coolleges avail .india 4 mtech in ME

Reply

Vivek October 4, 2009 at 17:12

I have already provided the information of all colleges. Maximum every college provides m.tech courses in all major fields, it’s up to how much percentile you score.

Reply

Leave a Comment

Comment moderation is enabled. Your comment may take some time to appear.

Additional comments powered by BackType

Previous post:

Next post: