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Wikipedia

Engineering

Engineering is the practice of using natural science, mathematics, and the engineering design process[1] to solve technical problems, increase efficiency and productivity, and improve systems. Modern engineering comprises many subfields which include designing and improving infrastructure, machinery, vehicles, electronics, materials, and energy systems.[2]

The steam engine, the major driver in the Industrial Revolution, underscores the importance of engineering in modern history. This beam engine is on display in the Technical University of Madrid.

The discipline of engineering encompasses a broad range of more specialized fields of engineering, each with a more specific emphasis on particular areas of applied mathematics, applied science, and types of application. See glossary of engineering.

The term engineering is derived from the Latin ingenium, meaning "cleverness" and ingeniare, meaning "to contrive, devise".[3]

Definition

The American Engineers' Council for Professional Development (ECPD, the predecessor of ABET)[4] has defined "engineering" as:

The creative application of scientific principles to design or develop structures, machines, apparatus, or manufacturing processes, or works utilizing them singly or in combination; or to construct or operate the same with full cognizance of their design; or to forecast their behavior under specific operating conditions; all as respects an intended function, economics of operation and safety to life and property.[5][6]

History

 
Relief map of the Citadel of Lille, designed in 1668 by Vauban, the foremost military engineer of his age

Engineering has existed since ancient times, when humans devised inventions such as the wedge, lever, wheel and pulley, etc.

The term engineering is derived from the word engineer, which itself dates back to the 14th century when an engine'er (literally, one who builds or operates a siege engine) referred to "a constructor of military engines".[7] In this context, now obsolete, an "engine" referred to a military machine, i.e., a mechanical contraption used in war (for example, a catapult). Notable examples of the obsolete usage which have survived to the present day are military engineering corps, e.g., the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The word "engine" itself is of even older origin, ultimately deriving from the Latin ingenium (c. 1250), meaning "innate quality, especially mental power, hence a clever invention."[8]

Later, as the design of civilian structures, such as bridges and buildings, matured as a technical discipline, the term civil engineering[6] entered the lexicon as a way to distinguish between those specializing in the construction of such non-military projects and those involved in the discipline of military engineering.

Ancient era

 
The Ancient Romans built aqueducts to bring a steady supply of clean and fresh water to cities and towns in the empire.

The pyramids in ancient Egypt, ziggurats of Mesopotamia, the Acropolis and Parthenon in Greece, the Roman aqueducts, Via Appia and Colosseum, Teotihuacán, and the Brihadeeswarar Temple of Thanjavur, among many others, stand as a testament to the ingenuity and skill of ancient civil and military engineers. Other monuments, no longer standing, such as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and the Pharos of Alexandria, were important engineering achievements of their time and were considered among the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

The six classic simple machines were known in the ancient Near East. The wedge and the inclined plane (ramp) were known since prehistoric times.[9] The wheel, along with the wheel and axle mechanism, was invented in Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) during the 5th millennium BC.[10] The lever mechanism first appeared around 5,000 years ago in the Near East, where it was used in a simple balance scale,[11] and to move large objects in ancient Egyptian technology.[12] The lever was also used in the shadoof water-lifting device, the first crane machine, which appeared in Mesopotamia c. 3000 BC,[11] and then in ancient Egyptian technology c. 2000 BC.[13] The earliest evidence of pulleys date back to Mesopotamia in the early 2nd millennium BC,[14] and ancient Egypt during the Twelfth Dynasty (1991–1802 BC).[15] The screw, the last of the simple machines to be invented,[16] first appeared in Mesopotamia during the Neo-Assyrian period (911–609) BC.[14] The Egyptian pyramids were built using three of the six simple machines, the inclined plane, the wedge, and the lever, to create structures like the Great Pyramid of Giza.[17]

The earliest civil engineer known by name is Imhotep.[6] As one of the officials of the Pharaoh, Djosèr, he probably designed and supervised the construction of the Pyramid of Djoser (the Step Pyramid) at Saqqara in Egypt around 2630–2611 BC.[18] The earliest practical water-powered machines, the water wheel and watermill, first appeared in the Persian Empire, in what are now Iraq and Iran, by the early 4th century BC.[19]

Kush developed the Sakia during the 4th century BC, which relied on animal power instead of human energy.[20]Hafirs were developed as a type of reservoir in Kush to store and contain water as well as boost irrigation.[21] Sappers were employed to build causeways during military campaigns.[22] Kushite ancestors built speos during the Bronze Age between 3700 and 3250 BC.[23]Bloomeries and blast furnaces were also created during the 7th centuries BC in Kush.[24][25][26][27]

Ancient Greece developed machines in both civilian and military domains. The Antikythera mechanism, an early known mechanical analog computer,[28][29] and the mechanical inventions of Archimedes, are examples of Greek mechanical engineering. Some of Archimedes' inventions, as well as the Antikythera mechanism, required sophisticated knowledge of differential gearing or epicyclic gearing, two key principles in machine theory that helped design the gear trains of the Industrial Revolution, and are widely used in fields such as robotics and automotive engineering.[30]

Ancient Chinese, Greek, Roman and Hunnic armies employed military machines and inventions such as artillery which was developed by the Greeks around the 4th century BC,[31] the trireme, the ballista and the catapult. In the Middle Ages, the trebuchet was developed.

Middle Ages

The earliest practical wind-powered machines, the windmill and wind pump, first appeared in the Muslim world during the Islamic Golden Age, in what are now Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, by the 9th century AD.[32][33][34][35] The earliest practical steam-powered machine was a steam jack driven by a steam turbine, described in 1551 by Taqi al-Din Muhammad ibn Ma'ruf in Ottoman Egypt.[36][37]

The cotton gin was invented in India by the 6th century AD,[38] and the spinning wheel was invented in the Islamic world by the early 11th century,[39] both of which were fundamental to the growth of the cotton industry. The spinning wheel was also a precursor to the spinning jenny, which was a key development during the early Industrial Revolution in the 18th century.[40]

The earliest programmable machines were developed in the Muslim world. A music sequencer, a programmable musical instrument, was the earliest type of programmable machine. The first music sequencer was an automated flute player invented by the Banu Musa brothers, described in their Book of Ingenious Devices, in the 9th century.[41][42] In 1206, Al-Jazari invented programmable automata/robots. He described four automaton musicians, including drummers operated by a programmable drum machine, where they could be made to play different rhythms and different drum patterns.[43]

 
A water-powered mine hoist used for raising ore, ca. 1556

Before the development of modern engineering, mathematics was used by artisans and craftsmen, such as millwrights, clockmakers, instrument makers and surveyors. Aside from these professions, universities were not believed to have had much practical significance to technology.[44]: 32 

A standard reference for the state of mechanical arts during the Renaissance is given in the mining engineering treatise De re metallica (1556), which also contains sections on geology, mining, and chemistry. De re metallica was the standard chemistry reference for the next 180 years.[44]

Modern era

 
The application of the steam engine allowed coke to be substituted for charcoal in iron making, lowering the cost of iron, which provided engineers with a new material for building bridges. This bridge was made of cast iron, which was soon displaced by less brittle wrought iron as a structural material.

The science of classical mechanics, sometimes called Newtonian mechanics, formed the scientific basis of much of modern engineering.[44] With the rise of engineering as a profession in the 18th century, the term became more narrowly applied to fields in which mathematics and science were applied to these ends. Similarly, in addition to military and civil engineering, the fields then known as the mechanic arts became incorporated into engineering.

Canal building was an important engineering work during the early phases of the Industrial Revolution.[45]

John Smeaton was the first self-proclaimed civil engineer and is often regarded as the "father" of civil engineering. He was an English civil engineer responsible for the design of bridges, canals, harbors, and lighthouses. He was also a capable mechanical engineer and an eminent physicist. Using a model water wheel, Smeaton conducted experiments for seven years, determining ways to increase efficiency.[46]: 127  Smeaton introduced iron axles and gears to water wheels.[44]: 69  Smeaton also made mechanical improvements to the Newcomen steam engine. Smeaton designed the third Eddystone Lighthouse (1755–59) where he pioneered the use of 'hydraulic lime' (a form of mortar which will set under water) and developed a technique involving dovetailed blocks of granite in the building of the lighthouse. He is important in the history, rediscovery of, and development of modern cement, because he identified the compositional requirements needed to obtain "hydraulicity" in lime; work which led ultimately to the invention of Portland cement.

Applied science led to the development of the steam engine. The sequence of events began with the invention of the barometer and the measurement of atmospheric pressure by Evangelista Torricelli in 1643, demonstration of the force of atmospheric pressure by Otto von Guericke using the Magdeburg hemispheres in 1656, laboratory experiments by Denis Papin, who built experimental model steam engines and demonstrated the use of a piston, which he published in 1707. Edward Somerset, 2nd Marquess of Worcester published a book of 100 inventions containing a method for raising waters similar to a coffee percolator. Samuel Morland, a mathematician and inventor who worked on pumps, left notes at the Vauxhall Ordinance Office on a steam pump design that Thomas Savery read. In 1698 Savery built a steam pump called "The Miner's Friend". It employed both vacuum and pressure.[47] Iron merchant Thomas Newcomen, who built the first commercial piston steam engine in 1712, was not known to have any scientific training.[46]: 32 

 
Jumbo Jet

The application of steam-powered cast iron blowing cylinders for providing pressurized air for blast furnaces lead to a large increase in iron production in the late 18th century. The higher furnace temperatures made possible with steam-powered blast allowed for the use of more lime in blast furnaces, which enabled the transition from charcoal to coke.[48] These innovations lowered the cost of iron, making horse railways and iron bridges practical. The puddling process, patented by Henry Cort in 1784 produced large scale quantities of wrought iron. Hot blast, patented by James Beaumont Neilson in 1828, greatly lowered the amount of fuel needed to smelt iron. With the development of the high pressure steam engine, the power to weight ratio of steam engines made practical steamboats and locomotives possible.[49] New steel making processes, such as the Bessemer process and the open hearth furnace, ushered in an area of heavy engineering in the late 19th century.

One of the most famous engineers of the mid-19th century was Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who built railroads, dockyards and steamships.

 
Offshore platform, Gulf of Mexico

The Industrial Revolution created a demand for machinery with metal parts, which led to the development of several machine tools. Boring cast iron cylinders with precision was not possible until John Wilkinson invented his boring machine, which is considered the first machine tool.[50] Other machine tools included the screw cutting lathe, milling machine, turret lathe and the metal planer. Precision machining techniques were developed in the first half of the 19th century. These included the use of gigs to guide the machining tool over the work and fixtures to hold the work in the proper position. Machine tools and machining techniques capable of producing interchangeable parts lead to large scale factory production by the late 19th century.[51]

The United States Census of 1850 listed the occupation of "engineer" for the first time with a count of 2,000.[52] There were fewer than 50 engineering graduates in the U.S. before 1865. In 1870 there were a dozen U.S. mechanical engineering graduates, with that number increasing to 43 per year in 1875. In 1890, there were 6,000 engineers in civil, mining, mechanical and electrical.[49]

There was no chair of applied mechanism and applied mechanics at Cambridge until 1875, and no chair of engineering at Oxford until 1907. Germany established technical universities earlier.[53]

The foundations of electrical engineering in the 1800s included the experiments of Alessandro Volta, Michael Faraday, Georg Ohm and others and the invention of the electric telegraph in 1816 and the electric motor in 1872. The theoretical work of James Maxwell (see: Maxwell's equations) and Heinrich Hertz in the late 19th century gave rise to the field of electronics. The later inventions of the vacuum tube and the transistor further accelerated the development of electronics to such an extent that electrical and electronics engineers currently outnumber their colleagues of any other engineering specialty.[6]Chemical engineering developed in the late nineteenth century.[6] Industrial scale manufacturing demanded new materials and new processes and by 1880 the need for large scale production of chemicals was such that a new industry was created, dedicated to the development and large scale manufacturing of chemicals in new industrial plants.[6] The role of the chemical engineer was the design of these chemical plants and processes.[6]

 
The solar furnace at Odeillo in the Pyrénées-Orientales in France can reach temperatures up to 3,500 °C (6,330 °F).

Aeronautical engineering deals with aircraft design process design while aerospace engineering is a more modern term that expands the reach of the discipline by including spacecraft design. Its origins can be traced back to the aviation pioneers around the start of the 20th century although the work of Sir George Cayley has recently been dated as being from the last decade of the 18th century. Early knowledge of aeronautical engineering was largely empirical with some concepts and skills imported from other branches of engineering.[54]

The first PhD in engineering (technically, applied science and engineering) awarded in the United States went to Josiah Willard Gibbs at Yale University in 1863; it was also the second PhD awarded in science in the U.S.[55]

Only a decade after the successful flights by the Wright brothers, there was extensive development of aeronautical engineering through development of military aircraft that were used in World War I. Meanwhile, research to provide fundamental background science continued by combining theoretical physics with experiments.

Main branches of engineering

 
Hoover Dam

Engineering is a broad discipline that is often broken down into several sub-disciplines. Although an engineer will usually be trained in a specific discipline, he or she may become multi-disciplined through experience. Engineering is often characterized as having four main branches:[56][57][58] chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, and mechanical engineering.

Chemical engineering

Chemical engineering is the application of physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering principles in order to carry out chemical processes on a commercial scale, such as the manufacture of commodity chemicals, specialty chemicals, petroleum refining, microfabrication, fermentation, and biomolecule production.

Civil engineering

Civil engineering is the design and construction of public and private works, such as infrastructure (airports, roads, railways, water supply, and treatment etc.), bridges, tunnels, dams, and buildings.[59][60] Civil engineering is traditionally broken into a number of sub-disciplines, including structural engineering, environmental engineering, and surveying. It is traditionally considered to be separate from military engineering.[61]

Electrical engineering

 
Electric motor

Electrical engineering is the design, study, and manufacture of various electrical and electronic systems, such as broadcast engineering, electrical circuits, generators, motors, electromagnetic/electromechanical devices, electronic devices, electronic circuits, optical fibers, optoelectronic devices, computer systems, telecommunications, instrumentation, control systems, and electronics.

Mechanical engineering

Mechanical engineering is the design and manufacture of physical or mechanical systems, such as power and energy systems, aerospace/aircraft products, weapon systems, transportation products, engines, compressors, powertrains, kinematic chains, vacuum technology, vibration isolation equipment, manufacturing, robotics, turbines, audio equipments, and mechatronics.

Bioengineering

Bioengineering is the engineering of biological systems for a useful purpose. Examples of bioengineering research include bacteria engineered to produce chemicals, new medical imaging technology, portable and rapid disease diagnostic devices, prosthetics, biopharmaceuticals, and tissue-engineered organs.

Interdisciplinary engineering

Interdisciplinary engineering draws from more than one of the principle branches of the practice. Historically, naval engineering and mining engineering were major branches. Other engineering fields are manufacturing engineering, acoustical engineering, corrosion engineering, instrumentation and control, aerospace, automotive, computer, electronic, information engineering, petroleum, environmental, systems, audio, software, architectural, agricultural, biosystems, biomedical,[62] geological, textile, industrial, materials,[63] and nuclear engineering.[64] These and other branches of engineering are represented in the 36 licensed member institutions of the UK Engineering Council.

New specialties sometimes combine with the traditional fields and form new branches – for example, Earth systems engineering and management involves a wide range of subject areas including engineering studies, environmental science, engineering ethics and philosophy of engineering.

Other branches of engineering

Aerospace engineering

 
The InSight lander with solar panels deployed in a cleanroom

Aerospace engineering covers the design, development, manufacture and operational behaviour of aircraft, satellites and rockets.

Marine engineering

Marine engineering covers the design,development,manufacture and operational behaviour of watercraft and stationary structures like oil platforms and ports.

Computer engineering

Computer engineering (CE) is a branch of engineering that integrates several fields of computer science and electronic engineering required to develop computer hardware and software. Computer engineers usually have training in electronic engineering (or electrical engineering), software design, and hardware-software integration instead of only software engineering or electronic engineering.

Geological engineering

Geological engineering is associated with anything constructed on or within the Earth. This discipline applies geological sciences and engineering principles to direct or support the work of other disciplines such as civil engineering, environmental engineering, and mining engineering. Geological engineers are involved with impact studies for facilities and operations that affect surface and subsurface environments, such as rock excavations (e.g. tunnels), building foundation consolidation, slope and fill stabilization, landslide risk assessment, groundwater monitoring, groundwater remediation, mining excavations, and natural resource exploration.

Practice

One who practices engineering is called an engineer, and those licensed to do so may have more formal designations such as Professional Engineer, Chartered Engineer, Incorporated Engineer, Ingenieur, European Engineer, or Designated Engineering Representative.

Methodology

 
Design of a turbine requires collaboration of engineers from many fields, as the system involves mechanical, electro-magnetic and chemical processes. The blades, rotor and stator as well as the steam cycle all need to be carefully designed and optimized.

In the engineering design process, engineers apply mathematics and sciences such as physics to find novel solutions to problems or to improve existing solutions. Engineers need proficient knowledge of relevant sciences for their design projects. As a result, many engineers continue to learn new material throughout their careers.

If multiple solutions exist, engineers weigh each design choice based on their merit and choose the solution that best matches the requirements. The task of the engineer is to identify, understand, and interpret the constraints on a design in order to yield a successful result. It is generally insufficient to build a technically successful product, rather, it must also meet further requirements.

Constraints may include available resources, physical, imaginative or technical limitations, flexibility for future modifications and additions, and other factors, such as requirements for cost, safety, marketability, productivity, and serviceability. By understanding the constraints, engineers derive specifications for the limits within which a viable object or system may be produced and operated.

Problem solving

 
A drawing for a steam locomotive. Engineering is applied to design, with emphasis on function and the utilization of mathematics and science.

Engineers use their knowledge of science, mathematics, logic, economics, and appropriate experience or tacit knowledge to find suitable solutions to a particular problem. Creating an appropriate mathematical model of a problem often allows them to analyze it (sometimes definitively), and to test potential solutions.[65]

More than one solution to a design problem usually exists so the different design choices have to be evaluated on their merits before the one judged most suitable is chosen. Genrich Altshuller, after gathering statistics on a large number of patents, suggested that compromises are at the heart of "low-level" engineering designs, while at a higher level the best design is one which eliminates the core contradiction causing the problem.[66]

Engineers typically attempt to predict how well their designs will perform to their specifications prior to full-scale production. They use, among other things: prototypes, scale models, simulations, destructive tests, nondestructive tests, and stress tests. Testing ensures that products will perform as expected but only in so far as the testing has been representative of use in service. For products, such as aircraft, that are used differently by different users failures and unexpected shortcomings (and necessary design changes) can be expected throughout the operational life of the product.[67]

Engineers take on the responsibility of producing designs that will perform as well as expected and, except those employed in specific areas of the arms industry, will not harm people. Engineers typically include a factor of safety in their designs to reduce the risk of unexpected failure.

The study of failed products is known as forensic engineering. It attempts to identify the cause of failure to allow a redesign of the product and so prevent a re-occurrence. Careful analysis is needed to establish the cause of failure of a product. The consequences of a failure may vary in severity from the minor cost of a machine breakdown to large loss of life in the case of accidents involving aircraft and large stationary structures like buildings and dams.[68]

Computer use

 
A computer simulation of high velocity air flow around a Space Shuttle orbiter during re-entry. Solutions to the flow require modelling of the combined effects of fluid flow and the heat equations.

As with all modern scientific and technological endeavors, computers and software play an increasingly important role. As well as the typical business application software there are a number of computer aided applications (computer-aided technologies) specifically for engineering. Computers can be used to generate models of fundamental physical processes, which can be solved using numerical methods.

 
Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW, demonstrating hyperlinks

One of the most widely used design tools in the profession is computer-aided design (CAD) software. It enables engineers to create 3D models, 2D drawings, and schematics of their designs. CAD together with digital mockup (DMU) and CAE software such as finite element method analysis or analytic element method allows engineers to create models of designs that can be analyzed without having to make expensive and time-consuming physical prototypes.

These allow products and components to be checked for flaws; assess fit and assembly; study ergonomics; and to analyze static and dynamic characteristics of systems such as stresses, temperatures, electromagnetic emissions, electrical currents and voltages, digital logic levels, fluid flows, and kinematics. Access and distribution of all this information is generally organized with the use of product data management software.[69]

There are also many tools to support specific engineering tasks such as computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) software to generate CNC machining instructions; manufacturing process management software for production engineering; EDA for printed circuit board (PCB) and circuit schematics for electronic engineers; MRO applications for maintenance management; and Architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) software for civil engineering.

In recent years the use of computer software to aid the development of goods has collectively come to be known as product lifecycle management (PLM).[70]

Social context

 
Robotic Kismet can produce a range of facial expressions.

The engineering profession engages in a wide range of activities, from large collaboration at the societal level, and also smaller individual projects. Almost all engineering projects are obligated to some sort of financing agency: a company, a set of investors, or a government. The few types of engineering that are minimally constrained by such issues are pro bono engineering and open-design engineering.

By its very nature engineering has interconnections with society, culture and human behavior. Every product or construction used by modern society is influenced by engineering. The results of engineering activity influence changes to the environment, society and economies, and its application brings with it a responsibility and public safety.

Engineering projects can be subject to controversy. Examples from different engineering disciplines include the development of nuclear weapons, the Three Gorges Dam, the design and use of sport utility vehicles and the extraction of oil. In response, some Western engineering companies have enacted serious corporate and social responsibility policies.

Engineering is a key driver of innovation and human development. Sub-Saharan Africa, in particular, has a very small engineering capacity which results in many African nations being unable to develop crucial infrastructure without outside aid.[citation needed] The attainment of many of the Millennium Development Goals requires the achievement of sufficient engineering capacity to develop infrastructure and sustainable technological development.[71]

 
Radar, GPS, lidar, etc. are all combined to provide proper navigation and obstacle avoidance (vehicle developed for 2007 DARPA Urban Challenge).

All overseas development and relief NGOs make considerable use of engineers to apply solutions in disaster and development scenarios. A number of charitable organizations aim to use engineering directly for the good of mankind:

Engineering companies in many established economies are facing significant challenges with regard to the number of professional engineers being trained, compared with the number retiring. This problem is very prominent in the UK where engineering has a poor image and low status.[73] There are many negative economic and political issues that this can cause, as well as ethical issues.[74] It is widely agreed that the engineering profession faces an "image crisis",[75] rather than it being fundamentally an unattractive career. Much work is needed to avoid huge problems in the UK and other Western economies. Still, the UK holds most engineering companies compared to other European countries, together with the United States.

Code of ethics

Many engineering societies have established codes of practice and codes of ethics to guide members and inform the public at large. The National Society of Professional Engineers code of ethics states:

Engineering is an important and learned profession. As members of this profession, engineers are expected to exhibit the highest standards of honesty and integrity. Engineering has a direct and vital impact on the quality of life for all people. Accordingly, the services provided by engineers require honesty, impartiality, fairness, and equity, and must be dedicated to the protection of the public health, safety, and welfare. Engineers must perform under a standard of professional behavior that requires adherence to the highest principles of ethical conduct.[76]

In Canada, many engineers wear the Iron Ring as a symbol and reminder of the obligations and ethics associated with their profession.[77]

Relationships with other disciplines

Science

Scientists study the world as it is; engineers create the world that has never been.

 
Engineers, scientists and technicians at work on target positioner inside National Ignition Facility (NIF) target chamber

There exists an overlap between the sciences and engineering practice; in engineering, one applies science. Both areas of endeavor rely on accurate observation of materials and phenomena. Both use mathematics and classification criteria to analyze and communicate observations.[citation needed]

Scientists may also have to complete engineering tasks, such as designing experimental apparatus or building prototypes. Conversely, in the process of developing technology, engineers sometimes find themselves exploring new phenomena, thus becoming, for the moment, scientists or more precisely "engineering scientists".[81]

 
The International Space Station is used to conduct science experiments in space.

In the book What Engineers Know and How They Know It,[82] Walter Vincenti asserts that engineering research has a character different from that of scientific research. First, it often deals with areas in which the basic physics or chemistry are well understood, but the problems themselves are too complex to solve in an exact manner.

There is a "real and important" difference between engineering and physics as similar to any science field has to do with technology.[83][84] Physics is an exploratory science that seeks knowledge of principles while engineering uses knowledge for practical applications of principles. The former equates an understanding into a mathematical principle while the latter measures variables involved and creates technology.[85][86][87] For technology, physics is an auxiliary and in a way technology is considered as applied physics.[88] Though physics and engineering are interrelated, it does not mean that a physicist is trained to do an engineer's job. A physicist would typically require additional and relevant training.[89] Physicists and engineers engage in different lines of work.[90] But PhD physicists who specialize in sectors of engineering physics and applied physics are titled as Technology officer, R&D Engineers and System Engineers.[91]

An example of this is the use of numerical approximations to the Navier–Stokes equations to describe aerodynamic flow over an aircraft, or the use of the Finite element method to calculate the stresses in complex components. Second, engineering research employs many semi-empirical methods that are foreign to pure scientific research, one example being the method of parameter variation.[citation needed]

As stated by Fung et al. in the revision to the classic engineering text Foundations of Solid Mechanics:

Engineering is quite different from science. Scientists try to understand nature. Engineers try to make things that do not exist in nature. Engineers stress innovation and invention. To embody an invention the engineer must put his idea in concrete terms, and design something that people can use. That something can be a complex system, device, a gadget, a material, a method, a computing program, an innovative experiment, a new solution to a problem, or an improvement on what already exists. Since a design has to be realistic and functional, it must have its geometry, dimensions, and characteristics data defined. In the past engineers working on new designs found that they did not have all the required information to make design decisions. Most often, they were limited by insufficient scientific knowledge. Thus they studied mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology and mechanics. Often they had to add to the sciences relevant to their profession. Thus engineering sciences were born.[92]

Although engineering solutions make use of scientific principles, engineers must also take into account safety, efficiency, economy, reliability, and constructability or ease of fabrication as well as the environment, ethical and legal considerations such as patent infringement or liability in the case of failure of the solution.[93]

Medicine and biology

 
A 3 tesla clinical MRI scanner

The study of the human body, albeit from different directions and for different purposes, is an important common link between medicine and some engineering disciplines. Medicine aims to sustain, repair, enhance and even replace functions of the human body, if necessary, through the use of technology.

 
Genetically engineered mice expressing green fluorescent protein, which glows green under blue light. The central mouse is wild-type.

Modern medicine can replace several of the body's functions through the use of artificial organs and can significantly alter the function of the human body through artificial devices such as, for example, brain implants and pacemakers.[94][95] The fields of bionics and medical bionics are dedicated to the study of synthetic implants pertaining to natural systems.

Conversely, some engineering disciplines view the human body as a biological machine worth studying and are dedicated to emulating many of its functions by replacing biology with technology. This has led to fields such as artificial intelligence, neural networks, fuzzy logic, and robotics. There are also substantial interdisciplinary interactions between engineering and medicine.[96][97]

Both fields provide solutions to real world problems. This often requires moving forward before phenomena are completely understood in a more rigorous scientific sense and therefore experimentation and empirical knowledge is an integral part of both.

Medicine, in part, studies the function of the human body. The human body, as a biological machine, has many functions that can be modeled using engineering methods.[98]

The heart for example functions much like a pump,[99] the skeleton is like a linked structure with levers,[100] the brain produces electrical signals etc.[101] These similarities as well as the increasing importance and application of engineering principles in medicine, led to the development of the field of biomedical engineering that uses concepts developed in both disciplines.

Newly emerging branches of science, such as systems biology, are adapting analytical tools traditionally used for engineering, such as systems modeling and computational analysis, to the description of biological systems.[98]

Art

 
Leonardo da Vinci, seen here in a self-portrait, has been described as the epitome of the artist/engineer.[102] He is also known for his studies on human anatomy and physiology.

There are connections between engineering and art, for example, architecture, landscape architecture and industrial design (even to the extent that these disciplines may sometimes be included in a university's Faculty of Engineering).[103][104][105]

The Art Institute of Chicago, for instance, held an exhibition about the art of NASA's aerospace design.[106] Robert Maillart's bridge design is perceived by some to have been deliberately artistic.[107] At the University of South Florida, an engineering professor, through a grant with the National Science Foundation, has developed a course that connects art and engineering.[103][108]

Among famous historical figures, Leonardo da Vinci is a well-known Renaissance artist and engineer, and a prime example of the nexus between art and engineering.[102][109]

Business

Business Engineering deals with the relationship between professional engineering, IT systems, business administration and change management. Engineering management or "Management engineering" is a specialized field of management concerned with engineering practice or the engineering industry sector. The demand for management-focused engineers (or from the opposite perspective, managers with an understanding of engineering), has resulted in the development of specialized engineering management degrees that develop the knowledge and skills needed for these roles. During an engineering management course, students will develop industrial engineering skills, knowledge, and expertise, alongside knowledge of business administration, management techniques, and strategic thinking. Engineers specializing in change management must have in-depth knowledge of the application of industrial and organizational psychology principles and methods. Professional engineers often train as certified management consultants in the very specialized field of management consulting applied to engineering practice or the engineering sector. This work often deals with large scale complex business transformation or Business process management initiatives in aerospace and defence, automotive, oil and gas, machinery, pharmaceutical, food and beverage, electrical & electronics, power distribution & generation, utilities and transportation systems. This combination of technical engineering practice, management consulting practice, industry sector knowledge, and change management expertise enables professional engineers who are also qualified as management consultants to lead major business transformation initiatives. These initiatives are typically sponsored by C-level executives.

Other fields

In political science, the term engineering has been borrowed for the study of the subjects of social engineering and political engineering, which deal with forming political and social structures using engineering methodology coupled with political science principles. Marketing engineering and Financial engineering have similarly borrowed the term.

See also

Lists
Glossaries
Related subjects

References

  1. ^ Hammack, William; Anderson, John (February 16, 2022). "Working in the Penumbra of Understanding". Issues in Science and Technology. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and Arizona State University. from the original on August 3, 2023. Retrieved August 3, 2023. The method used by engineers to create artifacts and systems—from cellular telephony, computers and smartphones, and GPS to remote controls, airplanes, and biomimetic materials and devices—isn't the same method scientists use in their work. The scientific method has a prescribed process: state a question, observe, state a hypothesis, test, analyze, and interpret. It doesn't know what will be discovered, what truth will be revealed. In contrast, the engineering method aims for a specific goal and cannot be reduced to a set of fixed steps that must be followed.
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Further reading

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of engineering at Wiktionary
  •   Learning materials related to Engineering at Wikiversity
  •   Quotations related to Engineering at Wikiquote
  •   Works related to Engineering at Wikisource

engineering, other, uses, disambiguation, practice, using, natural, science, mathematics, engineering, design, process, solve, technical, problems, increase, efficiency, productivity, improve, systems, modern, engineering, comprises, many, subfields, which, in. For other uses see Engineering disambiguation Engineering is the practice of using natural science mathematics and the engineering design process 1 to solve technical problems increase efficiency and productivity and improve systems Modern engineering comprises many subfields which include designing and improving infrastructure machinery vehicles electronics materials and energy systems 2 The steam engine the major driver in the Industrial Revolution underscores the importance of engineering in modern history This beam engine is on display in the Technical University of Madrid The discipline of engineering encompasses a broad range of more specialized fields of engineering each with a more specific emphasis on particular areas of applied mathematics applied science and types of application See glossary of engineering The term engineering is derived from the Latin ingenium meaning cleverness and ingeniare meaning to contrive devise 3 Contents 1 Definition 2 History 2 1 Ancient era 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Modern era 3 Main branches of engineering 3 1 Chemical engineering 3 2 Civil engineering 3 3 Electrical engineering 3 4 Mechanical engineering 3 5 Bioengineering 4 Interdisciplinary engineering 5 Other branches of engineering 5 1 Aerospace engineering 5 2 Marine engineering 5 3 Computer engineering 5 4 Geological engineering 6 Practice 7 Methodology 7 1 Problem solving 7 2 Computer use 8 Social context 8 1 Code of ethics 9 Relationships with other disciplines 9 1 Science 9 2 Medicine and biology 9 3 Art 9 4 Business 9 5 Other fields 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksDefinitionThe American Engineers Council for Professional Development ECPD the predecessor of ABET 4 has defined engineering as The creative application of scientific principles to design or develop structures machines apparatus or manufacturing processes or works utilizing them singly or in combination or to construct or operate the same with full cognizance of their design or to forecast their behavior under specific operating conditions all as respects an intended function economics of operation and safety to life and property 5 6 HistoryMain article History of engineering nbsp Relief map of the Citadel of Lille designed in 1668 by Vauban the foremost military engineer of his ageEngineering has existed since ancient times when humans devised inventions such as the wedge lever wheel and pulley etc The term engineering is derived from the word engineer which itself dates back to the 14th century when an engine er literally one who builds or operates a siege engine referred to a constructor of military engines 7 In this context now obsolete an engine referred to a military machine i e a mechanical contraption used in war for example a catapult Notable examples of the obsolete usage which have survived to the present day are military engineering corps e g the U S Army Corps of Engineers The word engine itself is of even older origin ultimately deriving from the Latin ingenium c 1250 meaning innate quality especially mental power hence a clever invention 8 Later as the design of civilian structures such as bridges and buildings matured as a technical discipline the term civil engineering 6 entered the lexicon as a way to distinguish between those specializing in the construction of such non military projects and those involved in the discipline of military engineering Ancient era nbsp The Ancient Romans built aqueducts to bring a steady supply of clean and fresh water to cities and towns in the empire The pyramids in ancient Egypt ziggurats of Mesopotamia the Acropolis and Parthenon in Greece the Roman aqueducts Via Appia and Colosseum Teotihuacan and the Brihadeeswarar Temple of Thanjavur among many others stand as a testament to the ingenuity and skill of ancient civil and military engineers Other monuments no longer standing such as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and the Pharos of Alexandria were important engineering achievements of their time and were considered among the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World The six classic simple machines were known in the ancient Near East The wedge and the inclined plane ramp were known since prehistoric times 9 The wheel along with the wheel and axle mechanism was invented in Mesopotamia modern Iraq during the 5th millennium BC 10 The lever mechanism first appeared around 5 000 years ago in the Near East where it was used in a simple balance scale 11 and to move large objects in ancient Egyptian technology 12 The lever was also used in the shadoof water lifting device the first crane machine which appeared in Mesopotamia c 3000 BC 11 and then in ancient Egyptian technology c 2000 BC 13 The earliest evidence of pulleys date back to Mesopotamia in the early 2nd millennium BC 14 and ancient Egypt during the Twelfth Dynasty 1991 1802 BC 15 The screw the last of the simple machines to be invented 16 first appeared in Mesopotamia during the Neo Assyrian period 911 609 BC 14 The Egyptian pyramids were built using three of the six simple machines the inclined plane the wedge and the lever to create structures like the Great Pyramid of Giza 17 The earliest civil engineer known by name is Imhotep 6 As one of the officials of the Pharaoh Djoser he probably designed and supervised the construction of the Pyramid of Djoser the Step Pyramid at Saqqara in Egypt around 2630 2611 BC 18 The earliest practical water powered machines the water wheel and watermill first appeared in the Persian Empire in what are now Iraq and Iran by the early 4th century BC 19 Kush developed the Sakia during the 4th century BC which relied on animal power instead of human energy 20 Hafirs were developed as a type of reservoir in Kush to store and contain water as well as boost irrigation 21 Sappers were employed to build causeways during military campaigns 22 Kushite ancestors built speos during the Bronze Age between 3700 and 3250 BC 23 Bloomeries and blast furnaces were also created during the 7th centuries BC in Kush 24 25 26 27 Ancient Greece developed machines in both civilian and military domains The Antikythera mechanism an early known mechanical analog computer 28 29 and the mechanical inventions of Archimedes are examples of Greek mechanical engineering Some of Archimedes inventions as well as the Antikythera mechanism required sophisticated knowledge of differential gearing or epicyclic gearing two key principles in machine theory that helped design the gear trains of the Industrial Revolution and are widely used in fields such as robotics and automotive engineering 30 Ancient Chinese Greek Roman and Hunnic armies employed military machines and inventions such as artillery which was developed by the Greeks around the 4th century BC 31 the trireme the ballista and the catapult In the Middle Ages the trebuchet was developed Middle Ages The earliest practical wind powered machines the windmill and wind pump first appeared in the Muslim world during the Islamic Golden Age in what are now Iran Afghanistan and Pakistan by the 9th century AD 32 33 34 35 The earliest practical steam powered machine was a steam jack driven by a steam turbine described in 1551 by Taqi al Din Muhammad ibn Ma ruf in Ottoman Egypt 36 37 The cotton gin was invented in India by the 6th century AD 38 and the spinning wheel was invented in the Islamic world by the early 11th century 39 both of which were fundamental to the growth of the cotton industry The spinning wheel was also a precursor to the spinning jenny which was a key development during the early Industrial Revolution in the 18th century 40 The earliest programmable machines were developed in the Muslim world A music sequencer a programmable musical instrument was the earliest type of programmable machine The first music sequencer was an automated flute player invented by the Banu Musa brothers described in their Book of Ingenious Devices in the 9th century 41 42 In 1206 Al Jazari invented programmable automata robots He described four automaton musicians including drummers operated by a programmable drum machine where they could be made to play different rhythms and different drum patterns 43 nbsp A water powered mine hoist used for raising ore ca 1556Before the development of modern engineering mathematics was used by artisans and craftsmen such as millwrights clockmakers instrument makers and surveyors Aside from these professions universities were not believed to have had much practical significance to technology 44 32 A standard reference for the state of mechanical arts during the Renaissance is given in the mining engineering treatise De re metallica 1556 which also contains sections on geology mining and chemistry De re metallica was the standard chemistry reference for the next 180 years 44 Modern era nbsp The application of the steam engine allowed coke to be substituted for charcoal in iron making lowering the cost of iron which provided engineers with a new material for building bridges This bridge was made of cast iron which was soon displaced by less brittle wrought iron as a structural material The science of classical mechanics sometimes called Newtonian mechanics formed the scientific basis of much of modern engineering 44 With the rise of engineering as a profession in the 18th century the term became more narrowly applied to fields in which mathematics and science were applied to these ends Similarly in addition to military and civil engineering the fields then known as the mechanic arts became incorporated into engineering Canal building was an important engineering work during the early phases of the Industrial Revolution 45 John Smeaton was the first self proclaimed civil engineer and is often regarded as the father of civil engineering He was an English civil engineer responsible for the design of bridges canals harbors and lighthouses He was also a capable mechanical engineer and an eminent physicist Using a model water wheel Smeaton conducted experiments for seven years determining ways to increase efficiency 46 127 Smeaton introduced iron axles and gears to water wheels 44 69 Smeaton also made mechanical improvements to the Newcomen steam engine Smeaton designed the third Eddystone Lighthouse 1755 59 where he pioneered the use of hydraulic lime a form of mortar which will set under water and developed a technique involving dovetailed blocks of granite in the building of the lighthouse He is important in the history rediscovery of and development of modern cement because he identified the compositional requirements needed to obtain hydraulicity in lime work which led ultimately to the invention of Portland cement Applied science led to the development of the steam engine The sequence of events began with the invention of the barometer and the measurement of atmospheric pressure by Evangelista Torricelli in 1643 demonstration of the force of atmospheric pressure by Otto von Guericke using the Magdeburg hemispheres in 1656 laboratory experiments by Denis Papin who built experimental model steam engines and demonstrated the use of a piston which he published in 1707 Edward Somerset 2nd Marquess of Worcester published a book of 100 inventions containing a method for raising waters similar to a coffee percolator Samuel Morland a mathematician and inventor who worked on pumps left notes at the Vauxhall Ordinance Office on a steam pump design that Thomas Savery read In 1698 Savery built a steam pump called The Miner s Friend It employed both vacuum and pressure 47 Iron merchant Thomas Newcomen who built the first commercial piston steam engine in 1712 was not known to have any scientific training 46 32 nbsp Jumbo JetThe application of steam powered cast iron blowing cylinders for providing pressurized air for blast furnaces lead to a large increase in iron production in the late 18th century The higher furnace temperatures made possible with steam powered blast allowed for the use of more lime in blast furnaces which enabled the transition from charcoal to coke 48 These innovations lowered the cost of iron making horse railways and iron bridges practical The puddling process patented by Henry Cort in 1784 produced large scale quantities of wrought iron Hot blast patented by James Beaumont Neilson in 1828 greatly lowered the amount of fuel needed to smelt iron With the development of the high pressure steam engine the power to weight ratio of steam engines made practical steamboats and locomotives possible 49 New steel making processes such as the Bessemer process and the open hearth furnace ushered in an area of heavy engineering in the late 19th century One of the most famous engineers of the mid 19th century was Isambard Kingdom Brunel who built railroads dockyards and steamships nbsp Offshore platform Gulf of MexicoThe Industrial Revolution created a demand for machinery with metal parts which led to the development of several machine tools Boring cast iron cylinders with precision was not possible until John Wilkinson invented his boring machine which is considered the first machine tool 50 Other machine tools included the screw cutting lathe milling machine turret lathe and the metal planer Precision machining techniques were developed in the first half of the 19th century These included the use of gigs to guide the machining tool over the work and fixtures to hold the work in the proper position Machine tools and machining techniques capable of producing interchangeable parts lead to large scale factory production by the late 19th century 51 The United States Census of 1850 listed the occupation of engineer for the first time with a count of 2 000 52 There were fewer than 50 engineering graduates in the U S before 1865 In 1870 there were a dozen U S mechanical engineering graduates with that number increasing to 43 per year in 1875 In 1890 there were 6 000 engineers in civil mining mechanical and electrical 49 There was no chair of applied mechanism and applied mechanics at Cambridge until 1875 and no chair of engineering at Oxford until 1907 Germany established technical universities earlier 53 The foundations of electrical engineering in the 1800s included the experiments of Alessandro Volta Michael Faraday Georg Ohm and others and the invention of the electric telegraph in 1816 and the electric motor in 1872 The theoretical work of James Maxwell see Maxwell s equations and Heinrich Hertz in the late 19th century gave rise to the field of electronics The later inventions of the vacuum tube and the transistor further accelerated the development of electronics to such an extent that electrical and electronics engineers currently outnumber their colleagues of any other engineering specialty 6 Chemical engineering developed in the late nineteenth century 6 Industrial scale manufacturing demanded new materials and new processes and by 1880 the need for large scale production of chemicals was such that a new industry was created dedicated to the development and large scale manufacturing of chemicals in new industrial plants 6 The role of the chemical engineer was the design of these chemical plants and processes 6 nbsp The solar furnace at Odeillo in the Pyrenees Orientales in France can reach temperatures up to 3 500 C 6 330 F Aeronautical engineering deals with aircraft design process design while aerospace engineering is a more modern term that expands the reach of the discipline by including spacecraft design Its origins can be traced back to the aviation pioneers around the start of the 20th century although the work of Sir George Cayley has recently been dated as being from the last decade of the 18th century Early knowledge of aeronautical engineering was largely empirical with some concepts and skills imported from other branches of engineering 54 The first PhD in engineering technically applied science and engineering awarded in the United States went to Josiah Willard Gibbs at Yale University in 1863 it was also the second PhD awarded in science in the U S 55 Only a decade after the successful flights by the Wright brothers there was extensive development of aeronautical engineering through development of military aircraft that were used in World War I Meanwhile research to provide fundamental background science continued by combining theoretical physics with experiments Main branches of engineeringFor a topical guide see Outline of engineering nbsp Hoover DamEngineering is a broad discipline that is often broken down into several sub disciplines Although an engineer will usually be trained in a specific discipline he or she may become multi disciplined through experience Engineering is often characterized as having four main branches 56 57 58 chemical engineering civil engineering electrical engineering and mechanical engineering Chemical engineering Main article Chemical engineering Chemical engineering is the application of physics chemistry biology and engineering principles in order to carry out chemical processes on a commercial scale such as the manufacture of commodity chemicals specialty chemicals petroleum refining microfabrication fermentation and biomolecule production Civil engineering Main article Civil engineering Civil engineering is the design and construction of public and private works such as infrastructure airports roads railways water supply and treatment etc bridges tunnels dams and buildings 59 60 Civil engineering is traditionally broken into a number of sub disciplines including structural engineering environmental engineering and surveying It is traditionally considered to be separate from military engineering 61 Electrical engineering Main article Electrical engineering nbsp Electric motorElectrical engineering is the design study and manufacture of various electrical and electronic systems such as broadcast engineering electrical circuits generators motors electromagnetic electromechanical devices electronic devices electronic circuits optical fibers optoelectronic devices computer systems telecommunications instrumentation control systems and electronics Mechanical engineering Main article Mechanical engineering Mechanical engineering is the design and manufacture of physical or mechanical systems such as power and energy systems aerospace aircraft products weapon systems transportation products engines compressors powertrains kinematic chains vacuum technology vibration isolation equipment manufacturing robotics turbines audio equipments and mechatronics Bioengineering Main article Biological engineering Bioengineering is the engineering of biological systems for a useful purpose Examples of bioengineering research include bacteria engineered to produce chemicals new medical imaging technology portable and rapid disease diagnostic devices prosthetics biopharmaceuticals and tissue engineered organs Interdisciplinary engineeringMain article List of engineering branches Interdisciplinary engineering draws from more than one of the principle branches of the practice Historically naval engineering and mining engineering were major branches Other engineering fields are manufacturing engineering acoustical engineering corrosion engineering instrumentation and control aerospace automotive computer electronic information engineering petroleum environmental systems audio software architectural agricultural biosystems biomedical 62 geological textile industrial materials 63 and nuclear engineering 64 These and other branches of engineering are represented in the 36 licensed member institutions of the UK Engineering Council New specialties sometimes combine with the traditional fields and form new branches for example Earth systems engineering and management involves a wide range of subject areas including engineering studies environmental science engineering ethics and philosophy of engineering Other branches of engineeringAerospace engineering Main article Aerospace engineering nbsp The InSight lander with solar panels deployed in a cleanroomAerospace engineering covers the design development manufacture and operational behaviour of aircraft satellites and rockets Marine engineering Main article Marine engineering Marine engineering covers the design development manufacture and operational behaviour of watercraft and stationary structures like oil platforms and ports Computer engineering Main article Computer engineering Computer engineering CE is a branch of engineering that integrates several fields of computer science and electronic engineering required to develop computer hardware and software Computer engineers usually have training in electronic engineering or electrical engineering software design and hardware software integration instead of only software engineering or electronic engineering Geological engineering Main article Geological engineering Geological engineering is associated with anything constructed on or within the Earth This discipline applies geological sciences and engineering principles to direct or support the work of other disciplines such as civil engineering environmental engineering and mining engineering Geological engineers are involved with impact studies for facilities and operations that affect surface and subsurface environments such as rock excavations e g tunnels building foundation consolidation slope and fill stabilization landslide risk assessment groundwater monitoring groundwater remediation mining excavations and natural resource exploration PracticeThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message One who practices engineering is called an engineer and those licensed to do so may have more formal designations such as Professional Engineer Chartered Engineer Incorporated Engineer Ingenieur European Engineer or Designated Engineering Representative MethodologyThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Design of a turbine requires collaboration of engineers from many fields as the system involves mechanical electro magnetic and chemical processes The blades rotor and stator as well as the steam cycle all need to be carefully designed and optimized In the engineering design process engineers apply mathematics and sciences such as physics to find novel solutions to problems or to improve existing solutions Engineers need proficient knowledge of relevant sciences for their design projects As a result many engineers continue to learn new material throughout their careers If multiple solutions exist engineers weigh each design choice based on their merit and choose the solution that best matches the requirements The task of the engineer is to identify understand and interpret the constraints on a design in order to yield a successful result It is generally insufficient to build a technically successful product rather it must also meet further requirements Constraints may include available resources physical imaginative or technical limitations flexibility for future modifications and additions and other factors such as requirements for cost safety marketability productivity and serviceability By understanding the constraints engineers derive specifications for the limits within which a viable object or system may be produced and operated Problem solving nbsp A drawing for a steam locomotive Engineering is applied to design with emphasis on function and the utilization of mathematics and science Engineers use their knowledge of science mathematics logic economics and appropriate experience or tacit knowledge to find suitable solutions to a particular problem Creating an appropriate mathematical model of a problem often allows them to analyze it sometimes definitively and to test potential solutions 65 More than one solution to a design problem usually exists so the different design choices have to be evaluated on their merits before the one judged most suitable is chosen Genrich Altshuller after gathering statistics on a large number of patents suggested that compromises are at the heart of low level engineering designs while at a higher level the best design is one which eliminates the core contradiction causing the problem 66 Engineers typically attempt to predict how well their designs will perform to their specifications prior to full scale production They use among other things prototypes scale models simulations destructive tests nondestructive tests and stress tests Testing ensures that products will perform as expected but only in so far as the testing has been representative of use in service For products such as aircraft that are used differently by different users failures and unexpected shortcomings and necessary design changes can be expected throughout the operational life of the product 67 Engineers take on the responsibility of producing designs that will perform as well as expected and except those employed in specific areas of the arms industry will not harm people Engineers typically include a factor of safety in their designs to reduce the risk of unexpected failure The study of failed products is known as forensic engineering It attempts to identify the cause of failure to allow a redesign of the product and so prevent a re occurrence Careful analysis is needed to establish the cause of failure of a product The consequences of a failure may vary in severity from the minor cost of a machine breakdown to large loss of life in the case of accidents involving aircraft and large stationary structures like buildings and dams 68 Computer use nbsp A computer simulation of high velocity air flow around a Space Shuttle orbiter during re entry Solutions to the flow require modelling of the combined effects of fluid flow and the heat equations As with all modern scientific and technological endeavors computers and software play an increasingly important role As well as the typical business application software there are a number of computer aided applications computer aided technologies specifically for engineering Computers can be used to generate models of fundamental physical processes which can be solved using numerical methods nbsp Graphic representation of a minute fraction of the WWW demonstrating hyperlinksOne of the most widely used design tools in the profession is computer aided design CAD software It enables engineers to create 3D models 2D drawings and schematics of their designs CAD together with digital mockup DMU and CAE software such as finite element method analysis or analytic element method allows engineers to create models of designs that can be analyzed without having to make expensive and time consuming physical prototypes These allow products and components to be checked for flaws assess fit and assembly study ergonomics and to analyze static and dynamic characteristics of systems such as stresses temperatures electromagnetic emissions electrical currents and voltages digital logic levels fluid flows and kinematics Access and distribution of all this information is generally organized with the use of product data management software 69 There are also many tools to support specific engineering tasks such as computer aided manufacturing CAM software to generate CNC machining instructions manufacturing process management software for production engineering EDA for printed circuit board PCB and circuit schematics for electronic engineers MRO applications for maintenance management and Architecture engineering and construction AEC software for civil engineering In recent years the use of computer software to aid the development of goods has collectively come to be known as product lifecycle management PLM 70 Social contextThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Robotic Kismet can produce a range of facial expressions The engineering profession engages in a wide range of activities from large collaboration at the societal level and also smaller individual projects Almost all engineering projects are obligated to some sort of financing agency a company a set of investors or a government The few types of engineering that are minimally constrained by such issues are pro bono engineering and open design engineering By its very nature engineering has interconnections with society culture and human behavior Every product or construction used by modern society is influenced by engineering The results of engineering activity influence changes to the environment society and economies and its application brings with it a responsibility and public safety Engineering projects can be subject to controversy Examples from different engineering disciplines include the development of nuclear weapons the Three Gorges Dam the design and use of sport utility vehicles and the extraction of oil In response some Western engineering companies have enacted serious corporate and social responsibility policies Engineering is a key driver of innovation and human development Sub Saharan Africa in particular has a very small engineering capacity which results in many African nations being unable to develop crucial infrastructure without outside aid citation needed The attainment of many of the Millennium Development Goals requires the achievement of sufficient engineering capacity to develop infrastructure and sustainable technological development 71 nbsp Radar GPS lidar etc are all combined to provide proper navigation and obstacle avoidance vehicle developed for 2007 DARPA Urban Challenge All overseas development and relief NGOs make considerable use of engineers to apply solutions in disaster and development scenarios A number of charitable organizations aim to use engineering directly for the good of mankind Engineers Without Borders Engineers Against Poverty Registered Engineers for Disaster Relief Engineers for a Sustainable World Engineering for Change Engineering Ministries International 72 Engineering companies in many established economies are facing significant challenges with regard to the number of professional engineers being trained compared with the number retiring This problem is very prominent in the UK where engineering has a poor image and low status 73 There are many negative economic and political issues that this can cause as well as ethical issues 74 It is widely agreed that the engineering profession faces an image crisis 75 rather than it being fundamentally an unattractive career Much work is needed to avoid huge problems in the UK and other Western economies Still the UK holds most engineering companies compared to other European countries together with the United States Code of ethics Main article Engineering ethics Many engineering societies have established codes of practice and codes of ethics to guide members and inform the public at large The National Society of Professional Engineers code of ethics states Engineering is an important and learned profession As members of this profession engineers are expected to exhibit the highest standards of honesty and integrity Engineering has a direct and vital impact on the quality of life for all people Accordingly the services provided by engineers require honesty impartiality fairness and equity and must be dedicated to the protection of the public health safety and welfare Engineers must perform under a standard of professional behavior that requires adherence to the highest principles of ethical conduct 76 In Canada many engineers wear the Iron Ring as a symbol and reminder of the obligations and ethics associated with their profession 77 Relationships with other disciplinesScience Scientists study the world as it is engineers create the world that has never been Theodore von Karman 78 79 80 nbsp Engineers scientists and technicians at work on target positioner inside National Ignition Facility NIF target chamberThere exists an overlap between the sciences and engineering practice in engineering one applies science Both areas of endeavor rely on accurate observation of materials and phenomena Both use mathematics and classification criteria to analyze and communicate observations citation needed Scientists may also have to complete engineering tasks such as designing experimental apparatus or building prototypes Conversely in the process of developing technology engineers sometimes find themselves exploring new phenomena thus becoming for the moment scientists or more precisely engineering scientists 81 nbsp The International Space Station is used to conduct science experiments in space In the book What Engineers Know and How They Know It 82 Walter Vincenti asserts that engineering research has a character different from that of scientific research First it often deals with areas in which the basic physics or chemistry are well understood but the problems themselves are too complex to solve in an exact manner There is a real and important difference between engineering and physics as similar to any science field has to do with technology 83 84 Physics is an exploratory science that seeks knowledge of principles while engineering uses knowledge for practical applications of principles The former equates an understanding into a mathematical principle while the latter measures variables involved and creates technology 85 86 87 For technology physics is an auxiliary and in a way technology is considered as applied physics 88 Though physics and engineering are interrelated it does not mean that a physicist is trained to do an engineer s job A physicist would typically require additional and relevant training 89 Physicists and engineers engage in different lines of work 90 But PhD physicists who specialize in sectors of engineering physics and applied physics are titled as Technology officer R amp D Engineers and System Engineers 91 An example of this is the use of numerical approximations to the Navier Stokes equations to describe aerodynamic flow over an aircraft or the use of the Finite element method to calculate the stresses in complex components Second engineering research employs many semi empirical methods that are foreign to pure scientific research one example being the method of parameter variation citation needed As stated by Fung et al in the revision to the classic engineering text Foundations of Solid Mechanics Engineering is quite different from science Scientists try to understand nature Engineers try to make things that do not exist in nature Engineers stress innovation and invention To embody an invention the engineer must put his idea in concrete terms and design something that people can use That something can be a complex system device a gadget a material a method a computing program an innovative experiment a new solution to a problem or an improvement on what already exists Since a design has to be realistic and functional it must have its geometry dimensions and characteristics data defined In the past engineers working on new designs found that they did not have all the required information to make design decisions Most often they were limited by insufficient scientific knowledge Thus they studied mathematics physics chemistry biology and mechanics Often they had to add to the sciences relevant to their profession Thus engineering sciences were born 92 Although engineering solutions make use of scientific principles engineers must also take into account safety efficiency economy reliability and constructability or ease of fabrication as well as the environment ethical and legal considerations such as patent infringement or liability in the case of failure of the solution 93 Medicine and biology nbsp A 3 tesla clinical MRI scannerThe study of the human body albeit from different directions and for different purposes is an important common link between medicine and some engineering disciplines Medicine aims to sustain repair enhance and even replace functions of the human body if necessary through the use of technology nbsp Genetically engineered mice expressing green fluorescent protein which glows green under blue light The central mouse is wild type Modern medicine can replace several of the body s functions through the use of artificial organs and can significantly alter the function of the human body through artificial devices such as for example brain implants and pacemakers 94 95 The fields of bionics and medical bionics are dedicated to the study of synthetic implants pertaining to natural systems Conversely some engineering disciplines view the human body as a biological machine worth studying and are dedicated to emulating many of its functions by replacing biology with technology This has led to fields such as artificial intelligence neural networks fuzzy logic and robotics There are also substantial interdisciplinary interactions between engineering and medicine 96 97 Both fields provide solutions to real world problems This often requires moving forward before phenomena are completely understood in a more rigorous scientific sense and therefore experimentation and empirical knowledge is an integral part of both Medicine in part studies the function of the human body The human body as a biological machine has many functions that can be modeled using engineering methods 98 The heart for example functions much like a pump 99 the skeleton is like a linked structure with levers 100 the brain produces electrical signals etc 101 These similarities as well as the increasing importance and application of engineering principles in medicine led to the development of the field of biomedical engineering that uses concepts developed in both disciplines Newly emerging branches of science such as systems biology are adapting analytical tools traditionally used for engineering such as systems modeling and computational analysis to the description of biological systems 98 Art nbsp Leonardo da Vinci seen here in a self portrait has been described as the epitome of the artist engineer 102 He is also known for his studies on human anatomy and physiology There are connections between engineering and art for example architecture landscape architecture and industrial design even to the extent that these disciplines may sometimes be included in a university s Faculty of Engineering 103 104 105 The Art Institute of Chicago for instance held an exhibition about the art of NASA s aerospace design 106 Robert Maillart s bridge design is perceived by some to have been deliberately artistic 107 At the University of South Florida an engineering professor through a grant with the National Science Foundation has developed a course that connects art and engineering 103 108 Among famous historical figures Leonardo da Vinci is a well known Renaissance artist and engineer and a prime example of the nexus between art and engineering 102 109 Business Business Engineering deals with the relationship between professional engineering IT systems business administration and change management Engineering management or Management engineering is a specialized field of management concerned with engineering practice or the engineering industry sector The demand for management focused engineers or from the opposite perspective managers with an understanding of engineering has resulted in the development of specialized engineering management degrees that develop the knowledge and skills needed for these roles During an engineering management course students will develop industrial engineering skills knowledge and expertise alongside knowledge of business administration management techniques and strategic thinking Engineers specializing in change management must have in depth knowledge of the application of industrial and organizational psychology principles and methods Professional engineers often train as certified management consultants in the very specialized field of management consulting applied to engineering practice or the engineering sector This work often deals with large scale complex business transformation or Business process management initiatives in aerospace and defence automotive oil and gas machinery pharmaceutical food and beverage electrical amp electronics power distribution amp generation utilities and transportation systems This combination of technical engineering practice management consulting practice industry sector knowledge and change management expertise enables professional engineers who are also qualified as management consultants to lead major business transformation initiatives These initiatives are typically sponsored by C level executives Other fields In political science the term engineering has been borrowed for the study of the subjects of social engineering and political engineering which deal with forming political and social structures using engineering methodology coupled with political science principles Marketing engineering and Financial engineering have similarly borrowed the term See also nbsp Engineering portal Main article Outline of engineering ListsList of aerospace engineering topics List of basic chemical engineering topics List of electrical engineering topics List of engineering societies List of engineering topics List of engineers List of genetic engineering topics List of mechanical engineering topics List of nanoengineering topics List of software engineering topics GlossariesGlossary of areas of mathematics Glossary of biology Glossary of chemistry Glossary of engineering Glossary of physics Related subjectsControversies over the term Engineer Design Earthquake engineering Ecotechnology Engineer Engineering economics Engineering education Engineering education research Engineers Without Borders Environmental engineering science Environmental technology Forensic engineering Global Engineering Education Green engineering Green building Industrial design Infrastructure Mathematics Open source hardware Planned obsolescence Reverse engineering Science Structural failure Sustainable engineering Technology Women in engineeringReferences Hammack William Anderson John February 16 2022 Working in the Penumbra of Understanding Issues in Science and Technology National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine and Arizona State University Archived from the original on August 3 2023 Retrieved August 3 2023 The method used by engineers to create artifacts and systems from cellular telephony computers and smartphones and GPS to remote controls airplanes and biomimetic materials and devices isn t the same method scientists use in their work The scientific method has a prescribed process state a question observe state a hypothesis test analyze and interpret It doesn t know what will be discovered what truth will be revealed In contrast the engineering method aims for a specific goal and cannot be reduced to a set of fixed steps that must be followed definition of engineering from the https dictionary cambridge org dictionary english Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary c Cambridge University About IAENG iaeng org International Association of Engineers Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved December 17 2016 There s no place like Chrome Archived from the original on July 31 2020 Retrieved September 6 2018 Engineers Council for Professional Development 1947 Canons of ethics for engineers Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved August 10 2021 a b c d e f g 1 Archived July 31 2020 at the Wayback Machine Includes Britannica article on Engineering engineer Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Origin 1250 1300 ME engin lt AF OF lt L ingenium nature innate quality esp mental power hence a clever invention equiv to in genium equiv to gen begetting Source Random House Unabridged Dictionary Random House Inc 2006 Moorey Peter Roger Stuart 1999 Ancient Mesopotamian Materials and Industries The Archaeological Evidence Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 042 2 D T Potts 2012 A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East p 285 a b Paipetis S A Ceccarelli Marco 2010 The Genius of Archimedes 23 Centuries of Influence on Mathematics Science and Engineering Proceedings of an International Conference held at Syracuse Italy June 8 10 2010 Springer Science amp Business Media p 416 ISBN 978 90 481 9091 1 Clarke Somers Engelbach Reginald 1990 Ancient Egyptian Construction and Architecture Courier 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Hamilton UK Engineering Council Quote The Civilingenior degree encompasses the main branches of engineering civil mechanical electrical chemical From the Internet Archive Indu Ramchandani 2000 Student s Britannica India 7vol Set Popular Prakashan p 146 ISBN 978 0 85229 761 2 Archived from the original on December 5 2013 Retrieved March 23 2013 Branches There are traditionally four primary engineering disciplines civil mechanical electrical and chemical History and Heritage of Civil Engineering ASCE Archived from the original on February 16 2007 Retrieved August 8 2007 What is Civil Engineering Institution of Civil Engineers Archived from the original on January 30 2017 Retrieved May 15 2017 Watson J Garth Civil Engineering Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on March 31 2018 Retrieved April 11 2018 Bronzino JD ed The Biomedical Engineering Handbook CRC Press 2006 ISBN 0 8493 2121 2 Bensaude Vincent Bernadette March 2001 The construction of a discipline Materials science 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website cites Bjerklie paper Archived April 19 2007 at the Wayback MachineFurther readingBlockley David 2012 Engineering a very short introduction New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 957869 6 Dorf Richard ed 2005 The Engineering Handbook 2 ed Boca Raton CRC ISBN 978 0 8493 1586 2 Billington David P 1996 The Innovators The Engineering Pioneers Who Made America Modern New ed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 14026 9 Madhavan Guru 2015 Applied Minds How Engineers Think W W Norton Petroski Henry 1992 To Engineer is Human The Role of Failure in Successful Design Vintage ISBN 978 0 679 73416 1 Lord Charles R 2000 Guide to Information Sources in Engineering Libraries Unlimited ISBN 978 1 56308 699 1 Vincenti Walter G 1993 What Engineers Know and How They Know It Analytical Studies from Aeronautical History The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 4588 8 External links nbsp The dictionary definition of engineering at Wiktionary nbsp Learning materials related to Engineering at Wikiversity nbsp Quotations related to Engineering at Wikiquote nbsp Works related to Engineering at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Engineering amp oldid 1176284565 Main branches of engineering, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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