How does anisotropic behavior influence the yield locus?

Answers (2)

an·i·so·trop·ic
adjective PHYSICS
(of an object or substance) having a physical property that has a different value when measured in different directions. A simple example is wood, which is stronger along the grain than across it.
(of a property or phenomenon) varying in magnitude according to the direction of measurement.
~ google.com

lo·cus
noun
1. technical
a particular position, point, or place.
"it is impossible to specify the exact locus in the brain of these neural events"
2. MATHEMATICS
a curve or other figure formed by all the points satisfying a particular equation of the relation between coordinates, or by a point, line, or surface moving according to mathematically defined conditions.
~ google.com

Maybe it does and maybe it doesn't. It depends on what you are talking about. It's hard to understand how "locus" applies to this question.

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yield locus equals yield criterion! :-)

You seem to have a flood of meaningless words. Are you getting this stuff from a book? I mean, like, we could burn it?

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0020768312001680

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