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The final equations of the purely mechanical theory of linear elasticity (i.e., when coupling with the temperature field is neglected, or when either isothermal or isentropic response is assumed) are obtained as follows. The stress-strain relations are used, and the strains are written in terms of displacement gradients. The final expressions for stress are inserted into the equations of motion, replacing ∂/∂x with ∂/∂X in those equations. In the case of an isotropic and homogenous solid, these reduce toknown as the Navier equations (here, ∇ = e1∂/∂X1 + e2∂/∂X2 + e3∂/∂X3, and ∇2 is the Laplacian operator defined by ∇·∇, ...(100 of 15762 words)