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Professors Adams, Brackin, Buckley, Burchett, Chambers,
Cornwell, Eifert, Fine, Gibson, Hulbert, Layton, Lui, Mayhew,
Mech, Merkel, Morin, Olson, Purdy, Richards, Sanders, Stamper,
Stienstra and Waite.
ME 123 Computer Applications I 4R-0L-4C W,S Pre: None
Software tools and engineering processes for mechanical
engineers. Topics may include: structured programming (Matlab),
simulation of rigid body motion (Working Model), presentation
software (Powerpoint, HTML), and spreadsheets. Introduction to
teaming and creativity.
ME 193 Selected Topics in Design Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S
Selected student design projects. May include testing and/or
computer aided design.
ME 201 Thermodynamics I 4R-0L-4C W Pre: MA 112
Covers first law of thermodynamics, second law of
thermodynamics, concept of entropy, simple process analysis,
properties of pure substances, equations of state, and state
diagrams. Stresses use of property tables and charts and
application of the first and the second laws to open and closed
systems undergoing changes.
ME 204 Aviation Fundamentals 2R-0L-2C Pre: EM 202 or ES 204
Covers Federal Aviation Regulations, meteorology, aircraft
structures, forces on airfoils, and aerodynamics. Emphasizes
predicting aircraft performance. Includes radio communication
and navigation techniques.
ME 293 Selected Topics in Design. Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S Pre: Sophomore class standing
Selected student design projects. May include testing and/or
computer aided design.
ME 301 Thermodynamics II 4R-0L-4C F,W Pre: ES 202 or ME 201
Applies property and component background to the analysis of
various power and refrigeration cycles. Presents gas and
gas-vapor mixtures, psychometric processes, and combustion.
Introduces compressible flow.
ME 302 Heat Transfer 4R-0L-4C S,F Pre: MA 222 and ES 202 or
CHE 301 or consent of instructor
Introduces the basic modes of heat transfer, heat transfer
properties, steady and unsteady one-dimensional heat
conduction, free and forced convection, radiation and heat
exchangers. Other topics may include numerical methods and
boiling and condensation.
ME 303 Kinematics of Machinery 3R-0L-3C F Pre: ES 204
This is an introduction to kinematics, the study of motion
without regard to forces. The course examines he motion of
planar mechanisms, particularly 4-bar mechanisms, various
slider-crank mechanisms, cams, and gear trains. Students will
develop analytical skills to determine the behavior of these
mechanisms. The students will apply these anlaytical skills to
design mechanisms to perform specific functions.
ME 304 Dynamics of Machinery 3R-0L-3C Pre: ME 303
Analytic study of the dynamics of mechanisms, rotating
machinery, reciprocating machinery, and flywheels. A design
project is used to demonstrate the developed techniques.
ME 305 Introduction to Aerospace Engineering 4R-0L-4C S Pre:
ES 202
Application of fundamental engineering concepts to aerospace
systems. Aircraft performance and stability. Physical
properties of the standard atmosphere. Aerodynamics of the
airplane including lift, drag and pitching moment estimation.
Introduction to orbital mechanics.
ME 311 Mechanical Measurements 1R-3L-2C W,S Pre: Junior class
standing
Fundamentals of measurement and measuring devices in
mechanical engineering. Instrument characteristics (e.g.,
response, rise time), data and error analysis, and
calibration. Experiments with modern basic instrumentation
applied to measurement of time, frequency, force, strain,
velocity, acceleration, temperature, pressure and flow rate.
ME 316 Fundamentals of Engineering Management 2R-0L-2C S Pre:
Junior or senior class standing
Managerial skills will be discussed. Topics to be covered
include decision making, problem solving, planning,
organization, communicating, scheduling, staffing objectives,
motivation and performance.
ME 317 Design for Manufacturing 3R-0L-3C W Pre: EM 104
This is an introductory course that examines the interactions
between design and manufacturing from the designer’s point of
view. Common manufacturing processes will be introduced and
design guidelines will be developed for each process. The
successful student will leave this class with an appreciation
that a designer must consider the method of manufacture during
the design process to ensure that a product is functional,
economically viable, and safe.
ME 318 Material Processing in Manufacturing 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ME
328
An introductory course in the control of the properties of
materials during manufacturing. Covers the interrelationship
between material properties and the principal manufacturing
processes like hot and cold working, casting, welding, heat
treating and machining. Emphasizes the importance of
considering manufacturability when making material selection
decisions in design.
ME 319 Producibility Considerations in Design 4R-0L-4C W Pre:
ME 328 or consent of instructor
Covers those aspects of design which affect the ease of
production hardware. Design of sheet metal, powder metal,
cast, and machined parts will be covered in depth, and others
may be added as appropriate. Residual stress, distortion,
tolerances, surface finish, and similar topics will be
discussed for each process. The emphasis is on avoiding the
design of features that will cause unnecessary difficulty in
manufacturing.
ME 320 Production Engineering 4R-0L-4C S Pre: ME 328
Covers the interface between mechanical engineering and
manufacturing. The emphasis is on written communications which
mechanical designers must supply to the manufacturing
department to have products made correctly. Topics include:
Computer aided design, geometric dimensioning and tolerancing,
parts lists, specifications, codes, standards, and other
documentation.
ME 323 Computer Applications II 2R-0L-2C W,S Pre: ME 123
Introduction to structured programming and applied numerical
methods in scientific computing. The course uses applied
problems in engineering and mathematics to introduce numerical
methods such as numerical interpolation, finite differencing,
integration, root finding, and linear algebraic system
solutions. Matlab is taught as a vehicle for solving the
problems numerically in a structured high speed environment.
ME 328 Materials Engineering 4R-0L-4C F Pre: CHEM 111
Introduces properties of metals, ceramics, polymers, and
composites. Relates material processing to properties through
underlying material structure. Overviews the materials
available to engineers and discusses applications and material
selection.
ME 330 Engineering Economy 4R-0L-4C W Pre: Senior class
standing (Same as CE 303)
Emphasizes time value of money. Familiarizes students with
concepts of annual cost, present worth, and minimum rate of
return as tools for consideration of economic factors
pertinent to the selection of alternate solutions to
engineering problems.
ME 331 Energy-Material Resource Recovery and Utilization
4R-0L-4C Pre: ME 301
An introduction to engineering problems created by
restrictions on uses of energy and raw materials. Current
practices in energy and material recycling.
ME 380 Creative Design 4R-0L-4C Pre: Permission of instructor
Emphasis on the creative process in engineering design.
Students will develop their design capability by exploring
various conceptual blocks, using creative enhancement
techniques and participating in “on-the-spot” design.
ME 385 Quality Methods 4R-0L-4C S Pre: MA 223 or MA 381 and
consent of instructor
Introduction to various aspects of statistical quality control
and statistical process control to include the following
topics: importance of variance reduction and probability
concepts influencing product quality and reliability;
development and application of control charts (P-charts,
NP-chart, C-charts, U-charts, Individuals Charts, moving range
charts, X-bar and R as well as X-bar and S charts); process
capability indices (their use and misuse); introduction to
acceptance sampling.
ME 393 Selected Topics in Design. Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S Pre: Junior class standing
Selected student design projects. May include testing and/or
computer aided design.
*ME 402 Advanced Heat Transfer 4R-0L-4C W Pre: ME 302
This course covers additional topics in conduction, convection
and radiation heat transfer as well as an introduction to mass
transfer, phase change and numerical methods.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 403 Numerical Heat Transfer 4R-0L-4C Pre: ME 302
Introduction to the modeling of heat transfer and fluid flow
processes using finite difference methods. Direct and iterative
solution techniques are used for initial and boundary value
problems. Discretization errors and stability are also
discussed.
ME 404 Optimization of Thermal Systems 4R-0L-4C Pre: ES 202
and ME 302
Introduction to the design and optimization of thermal and fluid
systems. Review of the factors that effect and the process
leading to the design of a workable system. Introduction to
optimization starting from the physical definition and
constraints. Several typical optimization techniques are
presented.
*ME 405 Theoretical Aerodynamics 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ES 202
Introduction to aerodynamics theory. Development of equations
of conservation of mass and momentum. Vorticity, induced
velocity and irrotational flow. Stream function, velocity
potential, Laplace’s equation and the principle of
superposition. Flow about a body, the Kutta-Joukowski Theorem.
Concepts of thin airfoil and finite wing theory. Exact
solutions to elementary viscous flow problems.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 406 Control Systems 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ES 205
Basic principles of feedback control theory. Mathematical
modeling and performance analysis of dynamical systems.
Includes stability analysis, root locus compensation and
design, frequency response analysis. Implementation of control
system analysis and design is gained with several laboratory
experiences.
ME 407 Power Plants 4R-0L-4C S Pre: ME 301
Steam, cogeneration and combined cycles are studied with the
aid of property software. Various components of the cycles are
studied in detail. A survey of alternative power sources is
presented. Tours of power plants are taken when available.
ME 408 Renewable Energy 4R-0L-4C W Pre: ES 202 or equivalent
Covers renewable energy sources such as solar heating and
cooling, wind energy, biomass, and photovoltaic energy.
Surveys the energy availability of these sources and life
cycle cost and present value used to evaluate the system.
Students will design a system which utilizes a renewable
energy source and economically evaluate the system.
ME 409 Air Conditioning 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ES 202 and ME 302 or
consent of instructor
Human comfort and the properties of air. Air conditioning in
residences, public and industrial buildings using vapor
compression and absorption units. Cooling loads, psychrometry,
fans, duct sizing and layout, automatic control, and acoustic
design considerations.
ME 410 Internal Combustion Engines 4R-0L-4C S Pre: ES 202
Study of spark ignition and compression ignition engines. Influences
of engine design features on performance, economy, and air
pollution. Influence of the combustion process, carburetion,
fuel injection and ignition characteristics on engine
operation.
ME 411 Propulsion Systems 4R-0L-4C S Pre: ME 301
Application of basic principles in the study of the
performance characteristics of air and space vehicles.
Aerodynamics of steady one dimensional isentropic compressible
flow. Shock waves, gas turbines, turbojet, turbofan, turboprop,
turboshaft, ram jet, rocket, nuclear propulsion and space
propulsion systems are discussed and compared.
ME 414 Technology Management and Forecasting 4R-0L-4C Arranged
Pre: Junior class standing or consent of instructor
Elements of managing the growth and operation of technological
systems. Technology forecasting tools including expert
methods, quantitative trends analysis, simulation and gaming.
Consideration of secondary forecasts, especially social and
economic. Techniques for enhancing creativity, managing
multidisciplinary projects and impact assessment techniques
are considered. Computer-based forecasting tools are applied.
Same as VA 491.
ME 415 Corrosion and Engineering Materials 4R-0L-4C Pre: ME
328 or CHE 362
Presents fundamentals of metallurgy and corrosion mechanisms
in engineering metals. Discusses various classes of corrosion
and methods of mitigating corrosion with emphasis on practical
situations.
ME 416 Introduction to MEMS: Fabrication and Applications
3R-3L-4C S Pre: JR or SR standing
Properties of silicon wafers; wafer-level processes, surface
and bulk micromachining, thin-film deposition, dry and wet
etching, photolithography, process integration, simple
actuators. Introduction to microfluidic systems. MEMS
applications: capacitive accelerometer, cantilever and
pressure sensor.
*ME 417 Advanced Materials Engineering 4R-0L-4C Pre: ME 328
and EM 203
Fundamentals of deformation and fracture in metals, polymers,
and ceramics with application to design. Emphasis on
time-temperature dependence of polymers, brittle behavior of
advanced ceramics, and the fracture mechanics approach to
design of high strength and critical application materials.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering
requirement for an advanced technical elective.
ME 419 Advanced MEMS: Modeling and Packaging 3R-3L-4C F Pre:
PH410 or equivalent course
Design process, modeling; analytical and numerical. Actuators;
dynamics and thermal issues. Use of software for layout and
simulation. Characterization and reliability of MEMS devices.
Electrical interfacing and packaging of MEMS. Microsensors,
microfluidic systems, applications in engineering, biology,
chemistry, and physics.
ME 420 Consulting Engineering Seminar 2R-0L-2C S Pre: Junior
class standing
Discusses problems in the field of consulting engineering;
seminars presented by practicing consulting engineers.
ME 421 Mechanical Engineering Laboratory 1R-3L-2C F,W Pre: ME
311
Introduction to engineering experimentation, centered on an
experimental project planned and executed by students.
Uncertainty analysis, instrumentation systems, and statistical
design of experiments.
Emphasis on project on project planning and execution,
developing a scope of work, interim deliverables, and
reporting engineering results.
*ME 422 Finite Elements for Engineering Applications 4R-1L-4C
W Pre: Junior class standing
Introduces finite element methodology from a strongly
theoretical perspective. Emphasizes solving various
one-dimensional, transient, non-linear problem statements
including heat conduction, beam deflection,
convection/diffusion (transport), gas dynamic shocks, and open
channel flows. Assesses higher order bases, time stepping
procedures, iterative solvers, and finite difference
methodologies. Utilizes Matlab for computational experiments.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 424 Composite Materials and Mechanics 3R-3L-4C Arranged
Pre: ES 202
Introduces materials and mechanics of composites with emphasis
on high performance polymer matrix composites. Topics include
material selection, laminate analysis, manufacturing, joining,
and testing. A team design-built-test project is required.
ME 425 Aerospace Engineering Laboratory 1R-3L-2C F,S Pre: ES
202
Introduction to experiment planning and exectution. Projects
involve wind tunnel testing including measurement of forces
and moments and flow visualization. Student organized and
executed with direct faculty consultation. Emphasis on written
presentation.
ME 426 Turbomachinery 4R-0L-4C Pre: ES 205 and ES 202 or
equivalent
Introduces the theory and issues related to the design of
axial and radial flow turbines, compressors and pumps. Euler’s
equation and vector diagrams are used to evaluate energy
transfer and efficiency.
*ME 427 Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics 4R-0L-4C
W Pre: ME 301, EM
Introduces the finite difference method to solve problems in fluid
mechanics and heat transfer.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 430 Mechatronic Systems 3R-3L-4C F,W Pre: ECE 207, ME 323
or consent of instructor
Applications of microprocessors and microcontrollers and
digital electronics to the design and utilizations of embedded
control systems in smart systems and products. Topics include
Boolean logic and algebra, system hardware and software
development, and interfacing for mechanical applications.
*ME 435 Robotics Engineering 3R-3L-4C W Pre: Senior class
standing
Interdisciplinary course in engineering systems applied to
computer controlled automata. Topics include kinematics,
control, operation, sensing, and design as applied to various
types of industrial and other robots and programmable
manipulators. A related project is required.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 440 Artificial Intelligence Applications in Engineering
Design 4R-0L-4C Pre: Senior class standing or consent of
instructor
Introduction to expert systems, genetic algorithms, and
object-oriented systems as used in engineering design.
ME 450 Engineering Design 3R-3L-4C W Pre: EM 203
Application of fundamentals of engineering mechanics in
analysis and synthesis of machine components and machine
systems with special emphasis on stress/strength analysis and
fatigue failures. Group projects are used to illustrate the
course concepts.
ME 460 Machine Design 3R-3L-4C S Pre: ME 450
Design of mechanical components and systems including threaded
fasteners, springs, bearings, gears, shafts, clutches, brakes,
belts, chains, and couplings. Group projects are used to
illustrate the course concepts.
ME 461 Aircraft Design 4R-0L-4C W Pre: ME 405 or consent of
instructor
Fundamentals of conceptual aircraft design. Aerodynamic
analysis, design constraints based on customer requirements,
mission profiles, aircraft sizing, optimization, and
presentation of performance capabilities. Oral and written
communication emphasized. Design teams. Can be taken in lieu
of ME 460, Machine Design or ME 462, Thermal Design.
ME 462 Thermal Design 4R-0L-4C F,W,S Pre: ES 202 and ME 302
Applications of the thermodynamic, heat transfer, and fluid flow
principles to the modeling and design of thermal systems.
These systems include pumps, fans, and heat and mass
exchangers. A team project which includes the design,
construction and testing of a fluid or thermal device or system
provides the focus for the course.
ME 470 Engineering System Design 3R-3L-4C F Pre: Senior class
standing
Design of multi-component systems with consideration of
societal and economic factors. Useful design techniques (such
as modeling, CPM, optimization, probabilistic approaches,
etc.) and factors influencing design (such as human factors,
products liability, ethics, safety, etc.) are presented and
discussed. Laboratory assignments emphasize case studies.
ME 490-491 Directed Research. Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S Pre: Completion of freshman and
sophomore course requirements and approval of adviser and
course instructor
Selected projects for student research.
ME 493 Selected Topics in Design. Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S Pre: Senior class standing
Selected student design projects. May include testing and/or
computer aided design.
NOTE: Maximum 8 credits total in ME 193, ME 293, ME 393, ME
490, ME 491 and ME 493.
UNDERGRADUATE-GRADUATE COURSES
ME 490-491 Directed Research. Hours as assigned. Maximum 4
credits per term. F,W,S Pre: Completion of freshman and
sophomore course requirements and approval of adviser and
course instructor.
*ME 501 Advanced Thermodynamics 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ME 301 or
equivalent
Study of advanced thermodynamic topics: modeling of transient
systems, exergy (availability) analysis, equations of state
and thermodynamics relationships for simple, compressible
substances.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 502 Topics in Heat Transfer 4R-0L-4C Arranged Pre: ME 302
Course may be repeated for different heat transfer topics.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 503 Viscous Fluid Flow 4R-0L-4C Pre: ES 205
Material and spatial descriptions of fluid motion. The Reynolds
transport equation. The stress tensor and governing equations
for the motion of viscous fluids. Newtonian fluids, the Navier-Stokes
equations. Asymptotic solutions including fully developed
channel flow, oscillating flat plate, wakes and jets.
Introduction to boundary layers and turbulent flow including
Reynolds averaging.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 504 Boundary Layer Theory 4F-0L-4C Pre: ME 503 or consent
of instructor
Specialization of Navier-Stokes equations to boundary regions.
The Blasius solution, von Karman’s integral form, general
integral methods including one and two parameter family
solutions. Turbulent boundary layers. Separation, boundary
layer control and introduction of three dimensional boundary
layers.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 505 Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic Systems 4F-0L-4C
Pre: ES 205, MA 222
Modeling and simulation of engineering components and systems.
Emphasis on a unified work-energy approach to modeling physical
systems, model formulation using a differential-algebraic form
of Lagrange’s equation, and the numerical solution of the
resulting initial-value problem. Applications are explored
using modeling and simulation projects.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 506 Advanced Control Systems 4R-0L-4C W Pre: ME 406 or
equivalent or consent of instructor
Physical models for control; system response, analysis and
design. Time domain; system response, analysis and design.
Frequency domain; state variable representation/description;
stability, controllability, observability; linear quadratic
regulator, pole-placement, state estimation/observers.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 507 Applied Nonlinear Control Systems 4R-0L-4C Pre: ME 406
or equivalent or consent of instructor
Analysis and design of controls for inherently nonlinear
systems and the use of nonlinear elements in design.
Techniques for analysis and design include, stability by
Liaqunov, describing functions, phase plane analysis, sliding
control, adaptive control and control of multi-input systems.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 509 Compressible Flow Theory 4R-0L-4C Pre: ES 202 and EM
301
Introduction to the dynamics of a compressible fluid. Equations
of motion for subsonic, supersonic and hypersonic flow. Prandtl-Meyer
flow. Oblique shock waves. Generalized method of
characteristics or thin airfoil theory.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 510 Gas Dynamics 4R-0L-4C F Pre: ES 202
Introduction to the dynamics of a compressible flow. Equations
of motion for subsonic and supersonic flow. Nozzle flow. Normal
and oblique shock waves, Prandtl-Meyer flow. Steady and
unsteady, one dimensional gas flow with friction and heat
transfer
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective..
*ME 511 Numerical Methods for Dynamic Systems Analysis
4R-0L-4C Pre: ES 205 and ME 323
Applications of approximate numerical solution techniques,
including the finite element method, to the analysis of
dynamic, continuous systems. Introduction to variational
principles in mechanics for purposes of formulating governing
equations of motion.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 512 Light Weight Structures 4R-0L-4C S Pre: MA 222 and EM
203
Applies the principles of mechanics to the structural analysis
of mechanical and aerospace components. Covers stress tensors,
shear flow in open and closed sections, beam columns, unsym-metrical
bending. Castigliano’s theorem, statically indeterminate
structures , thin walled pressure vessels, introduction to
elasticity.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 513 Environmental Noise 4R-0L-4C W Pre: Senior class
standing
Introduces noise and its sources as a potential public health
hazard. Covers the basics of sound propagation relating to
noise measurement and analysis. Emphasizes effects on humans
and the environment. Covers methods of noise and vibration
control and abatement including absorption, enclosures,
vibration isolation, damping, and mufflers. Team projects
involving noise measurement and reduction are required.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 516 Introduction to MEMS: Fabrication and Applications
3R-3L-4C S Pre: JR or SR standing
Properties of silicon wafers; wafer-level processes, surface
and bulk micromachining, thin-film deposition, dry and wet
etching, photolithography, process integration, simple
actuators. Introduction to microfluidic systems. MEMS
applications: capacitive accelerometer, cantilever and
pressure sensor.
Students enrolled in PH510, ME516, ECE516, CHE505, BE516 must
do project work on a topic selected by the instructor.
*ME 518 Advanced Kinematics 4R-0L-4C S Pre: ME 303
Considers the analysis, design, and simulation of planar and
spatial mechanisms. The mechanisms examined are parallel
manipulators, serial manipulators, and compliant mechanisms.
These mechanisms are analyzed for position, velocity,
acceleration, and workspace. The techniques used for the
analysis include vector approaches, homogeneous
transformations, and dual number techniques.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
ME 519 Advanced MEMS: Modeling and Packaging 3R-3L-4C F Pre:
PH410 or equivalent course
Design process, modeling; analytical and numerical. Actuators;
dynamics and thermal issues. Use of software for layout and
simulation. Characterization and reliability of MEMS devices.
Electrical interfacing and packaging of MEMS. Microsensors,
microfluidic systems, applications in engineering, biology,
chemistry, and physics.
Students enrolled in PH511, ME519, ECE519, CHE519, BE519 must
do project work on a topic selected by the instructor.
*ME 520 Computer-Aided Design and Manufacturing (CAD/CAM)
4R-0L-4C S Pre: ME 323 and senior class standing
Use and management of computer in engineering for drafting,
design management, documentation, and manufacturing. Covers
drafting methods and standards, design data management, CNC
operations and implementation.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 522 Advanced Finite Element Analysis 4R-1L-4C S Pre: ME
422
A continuation of ME 422. Includes multi-dimensional
extensions of 2-D theory for transient, nonlinear problem
statements in engineering. Utilizes Matlab and Ansys for
developing and assessing FEA solutions to real world problems
via theory developed in ME 422.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 525 Buckling Strength of Structures 4R-0L-4C Pre: CE 321
or consent of instructor
Discusses the buckling phenomenon of prismatic bars subjected
to combined axial and transverse loads. Considers elastic and
inelastic instability. Includes buckling of beams, columns,
curved bars, rings, plates, trusses and rigid frames. (Same as
CE 525)
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 528 Hypersonic and High Temperature Gas Dynamics 4R-0L-4C
Pre: ME 510
Applies the principles of gas dynamics to hypersonic flow. The
effects of very high Mach numbers, thin shock layers, entropy
layers, shock/boundary layer interactions, and real gas
effects are covered. Applications include reentry vehicle
aerodynamics, high temperature nozzle flows, and free molecule
flow.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 590 Thesis Research F,W,S
Credits as assigned; however, not more than 12 credits will be
applied toward the requirements of an
M.S. degree.
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective.
*ME 597 Selected Topics for Graduate Students. Credits as
assigned. Maximum 4 credits per term. F,W,S
* May be used to satisfy Mechanical Engineering requirement
for an advanced technical elective..
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