Sample Video Lecture | MIT Unified Engineering, Fall 2005 -



Uploaded by: MIT
Video Description:
Energy Exchange with Moving Blades
View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/16-01F05
License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms
More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu


Tags for this video: aeronautics aerospace engineering mechanics mit opencourseware programming thermodynamics unified

Find more videos in the "Education" category
See more videos uploaded by MIT

Related Videos
Lec 16 | MIT 8.02 Electricity and Magnetism, Spring 2002Lec 1 | MIT 8.02 Electricity and Magnetism, Spring 2002Class Competition Video | MIT Unified Engineering, Fall 200
lec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.htmllec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.htmllec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.html
Lecture - 1 Thermodynamics : The Fundamentals Of EnergyLec 17 | MIT 5.111 Principles of Chemical Science, Fall 2005Class Competition Video | MIT Unified Engineering, Fall 200
lec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.htmllec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.htmllec-16-mit-802-electricity-and-magnetism-spring-2002.html


Share This Video:       StumbleUpon       del.icio.us       Reddit       digg       Furl       Spurl       Simpy       YahooMyWeb


Comments for this video: Show || Hide
Comments for this video on YouTube
great vid ,this is ... ( 6 months ago by gacmo2009)
great vid ,this is really useful
Is this the first ... ( 6 months ago by decade03)
Is this the first video of the series?
College basically ... ( 2 months ago by charlesdarwinxxx)
College basically sell Admit ticket to attend class, like a hollywood movie, NFL football.
Yes-letter, yes, can come to class and see lecture.
No-letter. no, cannot come to class and see lecture.
Knowledge belongs to world. Knowledge belongs all six billion people of earth, not just 18-16 year old, living on campus, who can pay 50K year.
Digital lectures, textbooks, can reach billions, worldwide. anytime, anywhere.
Math is math. science is science.




URL