Which engineering is toughest...why?
Answer:
ELECTRONIC AND ELECTRICAL IS TOUGHEST....... ALSO
Chemical. Electronic. Electrical. I can't decide.
aerospace , nanotechnology, robotics, the list just goes
aeronotical engineering is the toughest. Because it have got a lot of difficult level stuff to learn.
do mechanical & u'l know
nothing is tough in any engineering..
electrical and electronic
Mechanical, Electrical, Chemical in no particular order.
Reasons. Intensive math courses: Calculus (integration, double integration, derivatives,
probabilities and statistics) nuclear physics, mechanics dynamics, static mechanics, fluid dynamics, heat transfer, and more.
Requires 4-5 years of intensive study for most. The gifted have no problems, but the average engineering candidate in the noted disciplines has to work very hard to get a degree. In my EE class we had 50% dropout.
If you're an academic none of them are difficult if you pay attention in class and study, but if you're not, any of them are difficult. It depends on what concepts you understand more readily. I'm a mechanical engineer, a field I picked because of my ability to readily understand mechanics, while I didn't readily understand chemistry and chemical engineering at first glance, though I suppose I would understand it if I took a course or two. Electric and electronic engineering is tedious though it leads to some interesting fields of study. Civil is basically large scale mechanical, and aerospace is like mechanical based more around the study of fluid mechanics and thermodynamics. Nuclear is mostly nuclear theory and the realm that is not seen visually but generally on a sheet of paper. So what ever discipline one chooses it must be based on the type of cognitive process the student is most proficient at, ie., theory, application, newtonian, etc. So I would say none of the disciplines are more difficult than the other, though I believe once an aerospace or nuclear engineer completes his/her senior year they would have little problem with any of the other disciplines due to their proficiency in math and physics at that point.
there is nothing tough or easy its your interest in which direction you wanna go......if u start comparing things without putting your perspective into it you will definitely get varied results
for example if i find maths boring it definitely becomes tough
if i find history interesting it becomes easier
It's all subjective. I'm a chemical engineer, and I feel I didn't have to try incredibly hard in college because I find it interesting and enjoyable. But EE type courses (such as second semester physics) confused me a little. My EE friends could whip out those problems in seconds, but then spend hours doing chemistry homework that I felt was insultingly easy. It's all a question of where your particular talents lie. Most engineers I know COULD do any kind of engineering, but they'd have to work a lot harder to pick up a different discipline. For me I think the difficulty level goes (from easiest to hardest) chemical, civil, mechanical, electrical. But that's based totally on my own abilities. I've heard quite a few people say that it goes civil, mechanical, eletrical, chemical, and that makes sense AS A GENERALIZATION. It's kind of like asking if basketball is tougher than football, they're different games with different talents required. What's easy for me is tough for you, and vice versa.
ELECRTICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING
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