Study Abroad Summer Session MyYSS

Engineering Improv: An Introduction to Engineering Analysis

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Course Number: 
S150E
Department (unused): 
CENG
Description: 
<p>Online Course. Mathematical modeling is not a scripted procedure. Models are constrained by physical principles, including conservation laws and experimental observations but this does not provide a closed description. There is a lot more art in mathematical modeling than is commonly acknowledged and improvisation plays a significant role.&#160; The artistic aspects are important and intellectually engaging because they often lead to a deeper understanding. This course provides a general introduction to engineering analysis and to chemical engineering principles. Material includes the derivation of governing equations from first principles and the analysis of these equations, including underlying assumptions, degrees of freedom, dimensional analysis, scaling arguments, and approximation techniques. The goal of this course is to obtain the necessary skills for improvising mathematical models for a broad range of problems that arise in engineering, science and everyday life. Students from all majors are encouraged to take this course. Enrollment limited to 25 students<em>.&#160;</em>1 Credit. Session A: May 27 – June 28. Tuition: $5070. Technology Fee: $85.</p>
Instructor Name: 
Michael Loewenberg
Subject Code (deprecated): 
CENG
Subject Number (unused): 
CENGS150E
Meeting Pattern (deprecated): 
MWTh 6.30-8.00p
Term Code: 
202402
CRN: 
30753
Instructor UPI (unused): 
10442731
Session (deprecated): 
H5A
Distributional Designation (deprecated): 
LMRM
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Distributional Designation (tax): 
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Primary CRN

CENG S150E (CRN: 30753)

Online Course. Mathematical modeling is not a scripted procedure. Models are constrained by physical principles, including conservation laws and experimental observations but this does not provide a closed description. There is a lot more art in mathematical modeling than is commonly acknowledged and improvisation plays a significant role.  The artistic aspects are important and intellectually engaging because they often lead to a deeper understanding. This course provides a general introduction to engineering analysis and to chemical engineering principles. Material includes the derivation of governing equations from first principles and the analysis of these equations, including underlying assumptions, degrees of freedom, dimensional analysis, scaling arguments, and approximation techniques. The goal of this course is to obtain the necessary skills for improvising mathematical models for a broad range of problems that arise in engineering, science and everyday life. Students from all majors are encouraged to take this course. Enrollment limited to 25 students. 1 Credit. Session A: May 27 – June 28. Tuition: $5070. Technology Fee: $85. (View syllabus)


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