to loads that do, or can, change over time, such as people walking around a building (occupancy) or movable objects such as furniture. Live loads are variable as they depend on usage and capacity.
dead load - Deal load refers to loads that relatively don't change over time, such as the weight of. All permanent components of a building including walls, Beam, columns, flooring material etc)
snow load - Snow load is the downward force on a building's roof by the weight of accumulated snow and ice.
wind load - The force on a structure arising from the impact of wind on it.
sesmic load - Seismic load is one of the basic concepts of earthquake engineering which means application of an earthquake-generated agitation to a building structure or its model.
point load - A point load is an equivalent load applied to a single point, which you can determine by calculating the total load over the object's surface or length and attributing the entire load to its center. Determine the total length or area to which aload is applied.
Uniformy distributed load - Uniformly Distributed Load (UDL) Uniformly distributed load is that whose magnitude remains uniform throughout the length.
uniformly varied load - Uniformly Distributed Load (UDL) Uniformly distributed load is that whose magnitude remains uniform throughout the length.
Moment /couple - The Moment of a force is a measure of its tendency to cause a body to rotate about a specific point or axis. A special case of moments is a couple. A couple consists of two parallel forces that are equal in magnitude, opposite in sense and do not share a line of action. It does not produce any translation, only rotation. The resultant force of a couple is zero. BUT, the resultant of a couple is not zero; it is a pure moment
Gradually varied load - It is that load whose magnitude varies along the loading length with a constant rate.
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