What Is Mechanical Engineering
What Is Mechanical Engineering
What Is Mechanical Engineering
Engineering?
Technically, mechanical engineering is the application of the principles and problem-solving techniques of engineering from design to manufacturing to the marketplace for any object. Mechanical engineers
analyze their work using the principles of motion, energy, and force—ensuring that designs function safely, efficiently, and reliably, all at a competitive cost.
Mechanical engineers make a difference. That's because mechanical engineering careers center on creating technologies to meet human needs. Virtually every product or service in modern life has probably
been touched in some way by a mechanical engineer to help humankind.
This includes solving today's problems and creating future solutions in health care, energy, transportation, world hunger, space exploration, climate change, and more.
Being ingrained in many challenges and innovations across many fields means a mechanical engineering education is versatile. To meet this broad demand, mechanical engineers may design a component, a
machine, a system, or a process. This ranges from the macro to the micro, from the largest systems like cars and satellites to the smallest components like sensors and switches. Anything that needs to be
manufactured—indeed, anything with moving parts—needs the expertise of a mechanical engineer.
This transformation happens at the personal scale, affecting human lives on a level we can reach out and touch like robotic prostheses. It happens on the local scale, affecting people in community-level spaces,
like with agile interconnected microgrids. And it happens on bigger scales, like with advanced power systems, through engineering that operates nationwide or across the globe.
Mechanical engineers have an enormous range of opportunity and their education mirrors this breadth of subjects. Students concentrate on one area while strengthening analytical and problem-solving skills
applicable to any engineering situation.
Disciplines within mechanical engineering include but are not limited to:
Acoustics
Aerospace
Automation
Automotive
Autonomous Systems
Biotechnology
Composites
Computer Aided Design (CAD)
Control Systems
Cyber security
Design
Energy
Ergonomics
Human health
Manufacturing and additive manufacturing
Mechanics
Nanotechnology
Production planning
Robotics
Structural analysis
Technology itself has also shaped how mechanical engineers work and the suite of tools has grown quite powerful in recent decades. Computer-aided engineering (CAE) is an umbrella term that covers
everything from typical CAD techniques to computer-aided manufacturing to computer-aided engineering, involving finite element analysis (FEA) and computational fluid dynamics (CFD). These tools and others
have further broadened the horizons of mechanical engineering.
Conceptual design
Analysis
Presentations and report writing
Multidisciplinary teamwork
Concurrent engineering
Benchmarking the competition
Project management
Prototyping
Testing
Measurements
Data Interpretation
Developmental design
Research
Analysis (FEA and CFD)
Working with suppliers
Sales
Consulting
Customer service
Mechanical Engineering
$64,695 $89,800 $131,350
National Labor Stats
More salaries and sources.
Nanotechnology allows for the engineering of materials on the smallest of scales. With the ability to design and manufacture down to the elemental level, the possibilities for objects grows immensely.
Composites are another area where the manipulation of materials allows for new manufacturing opportunities. By combining materials with different characteristics in innovative ways, the best of each material
can be employed and new solutions found. CFD gives mechanical engineers the opportunity to study complex fluid flows analyzed with algorithms. This allows for the modeling of situations that would previously
have been impossible. Acoustical engineering examines vibration and sound, providing the opportunity to reduce noise in devices and increase efficiency in everything from biotechnology to architecture.
Real-World Experience
Get ready to contribute on the job from day one. Our students benefit from hands-on experiences ranging from our senior capstone design program to our enterprise teams to internships/co-ops. As a mechanical
engineer, you can make a difference in the world by using the latest technologies to help solve today's grand challenges.
ABET Accreditation
Our undergraduate mechanical engineering program is ABET Accredited. ABET accreditation is a significant achievement. We have worked hard to ensure that our program meets the quality standards set by the
profession. And, because it requires comprehensive, periodic evaluations, ABET accreditation demonstrates our continuing commitment to the quality of our program—both now and in the future.