Science, asked by thunder080033, 1 month ago

i want to study robotic engineering and aeronautical engineering,which one should i study ? Why? pls answer​

Answers

Answered by Talentedgirl1
2

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Answer:

Aerospace engineering is essentially a specialized subset of mechanical engineering. Yes, you will learn a lot of fantastic details about aerospace (and probably astronautics too) but in my opinion, you will be better served by learning a lot of diverse information. After all, regardless of how much you learn, you will still end up spending the first year or so at your job essentially in training. The industry will teach you much more once you graduate.Mechanical engineering is the most diverse of the engineering fields. You learn a lot about structures, thermodynamics, energy, heat transfer, fluid dynamics, and a lot of practical mechanics. You also learn a little about computer programming, electrical engineering, and engines. Depending on what option courses you take, you could end up taking robotics or aerospace courses (and maybe even through other departments).

That said, all universities and programs vary a bit, so it’s useful to ask the advisors, current students, and recent graduates from your school.

Answered by harshitha2118
1

Answer:

Study mechanical engineering.

Aerospace engineering is essentially a specialized subset of mechanical engineering. Yes, you will learn a lot of fantastic details about aerospace (and probably astronautics too) but in my opinion, you will be better served by learning a lot of diverse information. After all, regardless of how much you learn, you will still end up spending the first year or so at your job essentially in training. The industry will teach you much more once you graduate.

Mechanical engineering is the most diverse of the engineering fields. You learn a lot about structures, thermodynamics, energy, heat transfer, fluid dynamics, and a lot of practical mechanics. You also learn a little about computer programming, electrical engineering, and engines. Depending on what option courses you take, you could end up taking robotics or aerospace courses (and maybe even through other departments).

That said, all universities and programs vary a bit, so it’s useful to ask the advisors, current students, and recent graduates from your school.

Mechanical engineers basically know how to make anything that moves, heats up, cools down, involves energy, or just sits there. We just need help from computer engineers or electrical engineers (sometimes) to finish the system.

Finally, it’s worth pointing out that what you learn in school is only a tiny starting block to what you’ll need to learn in your career. What engineering really teaches you is the skills and the confidence to teach yourself something. So even if you take chemical engineering, you could end up a great software engineer someday. Your major is just a jump start in the direction you think you might go.

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