What is Mechanical Engineering?
Mechanical engineering is a diverse subject that
derives its breadth from the need to design and manufacture everything from
small individual parts and devices (e.g., micro scale sensors and inkjet printer
nozzles) to large systems (e.g., spacecraft and machine tools). The role of a
mechanical engineer is to take a product from an idea to the marketplace. In
order to accomplish this, a broad range of skills are needed. The mechanical
engineer needs to acquire particular skills and knowledge. He/she needs to understand
the forces and the thermal environment that a product, its parts, or its
subsystems will encounter; to design them for functionality, aesthetics, and
the ability to withstand the forces and the thermal environment they will be
subjected to; and to determine the best way to manufacture them and ensure they
will operate without failure. Perhaps the one skill that is the mechanical
engineer’s exclusive domain is the ability to analyze and design objects and
systems with motion.
Since these skills are required for virtually
everything that is made, mechanical engineering is perhaps the broadest and
most diverse of engineering disciplines. Mechanical engineers play a central
role in such industries as automotive (from the car chassis to its every subsystem—engine,
transmission, sensors); aerospace (airplanes, aircraft engines, control systems
for airplanes and spacecraft); biotechnology (implants, prosthetic devices,
fluidic systems for pharmaceutical industries); computers and electronics (disk
drives, printers, cooling systems, semiconductor tools); microelectromechanical
systems, or MEMS (sensors, actuators, micropower generation); energy conversion
(gas turbines, wind turbines, solar energy, fuel cells); environmental control
(HVAC, air-conditioning, refrigeration, compressors); automation (robots, data
and image acquisition, recognition, control); manufacturing (machining, machine
tools, prototyping, microfabrication).
To put it simply, mechanical engineering deals
with anything that moves, including the human body, a very complex machine.
Mechanical engineers learn about materials, solid and fluid mechanics,
thermodynamics, heat transfer, control, instrumentation, design, and
manufacturing to understand mechanical systems. Specialized mechanical
engineering subjects include biomechanics, cartilage-tissue engineering, energy
conversion, laser-assisted materials processing, combustion, MEMS, microfluidic
devices, fracture mechanics, nanomechanics, mechanisms, micropower generation,
tribology (friction and wear), and vibrations. The American Society of
Mechanical Engineers (ASME) currently lists 36 technical divisions, from
advanced energy systems and aerospace engineering to solid-waste engineering
and textile engineering.
The breadth of the mechanical engineering
discipline allows students a variety of career options beyond some of the
industries listed above. Regardless of the particular path they envision for
themselves after they graduate, their education will have provided them with
the creative thinking that allows them to design an exciting product or system,
the analytical tools to achieve their design goals, the ability to overcome all
constraints, and the teamwork needed to design, market, and produce a system.
These valuable skills could also launch a career in medicine, law, consulting,
management, banking, finance, and so on.
For those interested in applied scientific and
mathematical aspects of the discipline, graduate study in mechanical
engineering can lead to a career of research and teaching.
Source : Columbia Engineering, Newyork
The Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science
Very nice. Thank you
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