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An introduction to engineering adapted from the course “What is Engineering?” offered to freshman at Johns Hopkins University What is Engineering?

What is Engineering?

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What is Engineering?. An introduction to engineering adapted from the course “What is Engineering?” offered to freshman at Johns Hopkins University. What is Engineering ? How does it differ from science?. iPod. Science: DESCRIBE EXPLAIN - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What is Engineering?

An introduction to engineering adapted from the course “What is Engineering?” offered to freshman at Johns Hopkins University

What is Engineering?

Page 2: What is Engineering?

What is Engineering?

How does it differ from science?

Science:DESCRIBEEXPLAIN

Parameters: θ, Ψ, ρ, σ2,☺,λ, Ǻ, g, ћ, H2C5OH, . . .Starting salary: $38K (chemist)

Engineering:INVENTDESIGNBUILD

Parameters: $Starting salary: $54K (chemical engineer)

iPod

spandex

Page 3: What is Engineering?

If it moves, it's mechanical engineering;If it doesn't move, it's civil engineering;If you can't see it, it's electrical engineering;If it smells, it's chemical engineering.

Engineering: What are its fields?Thirty years ago. . .

Today, it’s a blur. . .

Biomolecular-, nano-, computer-, materials-, robotic-, biomedical-, environmental-, . . .

Page 4: What is Engineering?

What is Engineering?

According to Webster’s II New Riverside Dictionary:

Engineering is “the application of mathematical andscientific principles to practical ends, as the design,construction, and operation of economical and efficientstructures, equipment, and systems.”

But is there more. . .?

“Engineering. . .to define rudely but not inaptly is the art of doing that well with one dollar, which any bungler can do with two after a fashion”--Arthur Mellen Wellington, The Economic Theory of Railway Location (1911)

Page 5: What is Engineering?

Engineering is art. Aesthetics as well as function counts

The Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, SpainFrank Gehry, architect

The Ironbridge, Coalbrookdale,England 1779

Page 6: What is Engineering?

More art . . .

Pont du Gard, France, 100AD

Sagrada familia, Barcelona

Boring - see Civil Engineers --UK Yellow Pages

Page 7: What is Engineering?

More engineering art. . .by women

Vietnam Memorial (Mia Lin)

Hearst Castle (Julia Morgan) Musee d’Orsay (Gae Aulenti)

London eye (Julia Barfield)

Page 8: What is Engineering?

Engineering is problem-solving

One solution Two solutions

Page 9: What is Engineering?

Engineering is approximation. The mathematics of engineeringsystems are often too complicated to solve analytically.

“Engineering problems are under-defined, there are many solutions,good, bad and indifferent. The art is to arrive at a good solution.This is a creative activity involving imagination, intuition, anddeliberate choice.”--Ove Arup

Page 10: What is Engineering?

Engineering is measurement and estimation. River flow,noise in a communication system, scatter in a laser beam,earthquake characteristics--all require measurement

Page 11: What is Engineering?

Engineering is modeling and simulation.

Often the only efficient means to confirm that an idea or design will work is to experiment with a scale model or computer simulation.

Model of the X-33 being testedin the NASA Langley Mach 20helium wind tunnel

Page 12: What is Engineering?

Engineering is communication. Making presentations,producing technical manuals, coordinating teams for largescale projects are all fundamental to engineering practice.

Richard Feynmanduring the Challengerdisaster hearings.

$125M communication error

Page 13: What is Engineering?

Engineering is politics. The best functional solutionis not necessarily the best practical solution.

Three-mile island

NIMBY

Alaskan pipeline

Page 14: What is Engineering?

Engineering is finance. Design, construction, operation,and maintenance costs determine the viability ofprojects.

The Big Dig, Boston: $14.2B ($22B as of 7/2008)

The Channel tunnel: $21B

($1B = 666 Eiffel towers)

Page 15: What is Engineering?

Engineering is invention/design/innovation. New devices, materials, and processes are developed by engineers to meet needs that existing technologies do not address.

Page 16: What is Engineering?

Most Lucrative College Degreesby Julianne Pepitone

Friday, July 24, 2009provided by

. . .engineering diplomas account for 12 of the 15 the top-paying majors. NACE collects its data by surveying 200 college career centers.

. . .salaries for graduates who studied fields like social work command tiny paychecks, somewhere in the vicinity of $29,000. English, foreign language and communications majors make about $35,000.

“. . .few grads offer math skills, and those who can are rewarded."

Engineering is an outstanding salary.

Page 17: What is Engineering?

Engineering is ethics.

Engineering is safety.

Engineering is public service.

. . .

“Architects and engineers are among the most fortunate of men since they build their own monuments with public consent, public approval and often public money”--John Prebble

Page 18: What is Engineering?

Engineering is new materials. . . and the space elevator

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Engineering is new designs for old problems

Millau viaduct-France (2005)

Page 20: What is Engineering?

A 21st century Eiffel Tower? (Chosen for London 2012 Olympics)

Page 21: What is Engineering?

Engineering isn’t only about big things.

It’s also about nano-bio, bottom-up, tailored structures

quantum dotbiological markers

SWCN switches nano-robots

Page 22: What is Engineering?

Engineering is haptics and robotic surgery

Page 23: What is Engineering?

Engineering is acoustic control

Page 24: What is Engineering?

Expose yourself to engineering!