Engineering Science (ENSC)
ENSC 2113
Statics
Prerequisite(s): MATH 2144 and either PHYS 1114 or 2014. Resultants of force systems, static equilibrium of rigid bodies, statics of structures, and fluid statics. Shear and moment diagrams.
ENSC 2123
Elementary Dynamics
Prerequisite(s): 2113. Kinematics and kinetics of particles, systems of particles, and rigid bodies from a Newtonian viewpoint using vector algebra and calculus. Work-energy and impulse-momentum principles. Planar and three-dimensional kinetics and kinematics of rigid bodies.
ENSC 2143
Strength of Materials
Prerequisite(s): 2113. Bending moments, deformation and displacement in elastic and plastic deformable bodies. Axial, torsional and shear loads. Buckling stress transformations and combined loads.
ENSC 2213
Thermodynamics
Prerequisite(s): CHEM 1314, 1414 or 1515, MATH 2144, PHYS 2014. Properties of substances and principles governing changes in form of energy. First and second laws.
ENSC 2613
Introduction to Electrical Science
Prerequisite(s): MATH 2153 and PHYS 2114. Elements of electrical engineering; AC and DC circuits, mesh and node formulation of network equations, steady-state response to sinusoids, energy, power and power factor.
ENSC 3213
Computer Based Systems in Engineering
Prerequisite(s): CS 1113 or ENSC 1412 and sophomore or higher standing. A comprehensive introduction to technology and application of microprocessors, concepts of computer and computation, interfacing and communication, data acquisition and representation. Applications of general-purpose and embedded processors in various disciplines of engineering and engineering problem solving.
ENSC 3233
Fluid Mechanics
Prerequisite(s): 2113, MATH 2153. The study of fluid properties, statics, conservation equations, dimensional analysis and similitude, viscous flow in ducts, inviscid flow, boundary layer theory, open channel flow, turbomachinery and fluid measurement techniques.
ENSC 3313
Materials Science
Prerequisite(s): CHEM 1314 or 1414 or 1515. Introductory level. Relationship between structure and properties of materials and engineering applications. Atomic, microscopic and macroscopic properties.
Current as of:
06/19/2009 12:53 PM
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