|
|
Civil Engineering (C E)
Aeronautical
and Astronautical Engineering(A&AE)
Civil
Engineering (C E)
|
CE 20100 SURVEYING & G. I. S.
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 16400 and PHYS 15200
Theory and practice of land surveying. Fundamentals
of
observing distances, elevations, and angles.
Analysis of errors
in surveying measurements. Computations of irregular
areas.
Circular and parabolic curves. Earth-work estimates.
Computer applications, photogrammetry, geographic
information
systems (GIS) and global positioning systems (GPS)
technologies.
CE 20400 CIVIL ENGINEERING MATERIALS
(Class 2, Lab. 2, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 15900 and CHM 11500
The goal of this course is to provide a firm grasp
on how to use, specify,
and test common civil
engineering construction materials such as: steel;
aluminum; aggregates; portland cement concrete; asphalt cement
concrete; constituents of masonry; fiber reinforced
plastics (FRPs); and timber. While the practical
behaviors of these materials systems will be
emphasized, an understanding of these behaviors will
be approached through examination of the materials'
microstructural characteristics, composites.
CE 27300 MECHANICS OF MATERIALS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 27100 and MA 26100
Analysis of stress and strain, Mohr¡¯s circle,
equations of
equilibriums and compatibility; stress-strain laws;
extension
torsions, bending and deflection of beams, buckling
of
columns, elastic stability and strain energy,
Castigliano's
Theorem, pressure vessels, selected topics.
CE 32200 INTRO TO CONSTRUCTION ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Lab. 0, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 27300 or consent of instructor
Introduction to project planning-management-cost
of construction projects-U.S. construction
industry, quantity takeoff, cost estimating,
organization of construction firms-equivalence,
present worth, uniform annual cost,
depreciation-documents-contracts and
management-project scheduling-inspection.
CE 32300 SOIL ENGINEERING
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME/CE 31200 and ME/CE 31300
Introduction to soil engineering and testing. Identification
and classification tests, soil water systems, settlement principles,
soil stresses, and shear strength testing.
CE 34200 ENGINEERING HYDROLOGY & HYDRAULICS
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME/CE 31200 and ME/CE 31300
Introductory concepts, precipitation. Evaporation
and transpiration.
Interception and infiltration. Surface runoff,
groundwater,
and streamflow. Hydrograph analysis. Applied
hydraulics
including pipe and channel flow with design
applications
in culverts, pumping, water distribution storm and
sanitary
sewer systems.
CE 35100 INTRODUCTION TO
TRANSPORTATION ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: STAT 34500 and ME/CE 31200
Planning and operations of transportation facilities. Vehicle,
operation and infrastructure characteristics. Technological,
economic, and environmental factors. Travel demand
modeling and capacity analysis.
CE 35400 INTRODUCTION TO
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Introduction to air and water pollution, noise, and hazardous
and sold wastes; consideration of treatment and management
issues.
CE 41100 BUILDING DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ENGR 11400 and CE 32300 and CE 33400
Structural steel and reinforced concrete building
design.
Analysis of structural behavior of framework.
Systems that
resist lateral loads. Use of current building codes
and design
specifications. Review of building designs.
Preliminary and
final designs including analysis of alternative
structural systems,
and preparation of design sketches and calculations.
CE 42800 TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35100
Driver, pedestrian, and vehicular characteristics. Traffic characteristics,
study of highway capacity; analyses of traffic patterns.
Principles of traffic control for improved highway traffic
service. Use intersection, corridor or network analysis, computer
evaluation, and optimization tools.
CE 43000 TRANSPORTATION POLICY
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35100
Current concepts, theories, and issues in managing transportation
organizations. Study of transportation logistics and engineering
systems with an overview of the operating context, leadership
challenges, strategies and management tools that are used in
today's public and private transportation organizations. Analyze
alternative models of decision-making, strategic planning, stakeholder
valuation and analysis, government-based regulation and
cooperation within the transportation enterprise, disaster communications,
systems safety, change management and the
impact of globalization.
CE 436000 URBAN TRANSPORTATION
PLANNING AND MODELING
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35100
Transportation data sources and cost analysis; management
of transportation systems; transport financing; intelligent transportation
systems planning; sustainable transportation concepts.
Use of popular travel demand software and applications of geographic
information systems (GIS) and global positioning
systems (GPS).
CE 44600 WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35400
Overview of engineering approaches to protect water quality
with an emphasis on fundamental principals. Theory and
conceptual design of systems for treating municipal wastewater
and drinking water. Reactor theory, process kinetics,
and models. Physical, chemical, and biological processes,
including sedimentation, filtration, biological treatment,
disinfection and sludge processing. Engineered and natural
processes for wastewater.
CE 45200 AIR POLLUTION
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35400
Analysis of air pollution sources. Effects of air pollutants on
human health and environment. Technologies and methods
used to control air pollution. Regional and global issued such
as acid rain, ozone depletion, and global climate change.
CE 45800 SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35400
Planning and design of solid waste management systems;
includes characterization and collection of domestic, commercial,
and industrial solid wastes, waste minimization
and recycling, energy and materials recovery, composting,
incineration and landfill design.
CE 46200 HIGHWAY DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 35100 and CE 33400
Introduction to traffic engineering and highway planning.
Design, construction, and maintenance of highway facilities;
earthwork, drainage structures; pavements. Preparation of
environmental impact statement. This course has computer
applications and will include completing a design project.
CE 47100 REINFORCED CONCRETE DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 33400
Analysis and design of beams, one-way slabs, and
columns. Design of building frames using pattern
loading and moments coefficients.
CE 48900 CIVIL ENGINEERING PROJECTS
(Class 0 to 6, Lab. 0 to 18, Cr. 1 to 6)
Special topics of contemporary importance or of
special interest that are outside the scope of the
standard under- graduate curriculum can be studied
under the Civil Engineering Projects course.
Interested students should seek a faculty advisor by
meeting with individual faculty members who work in
their area of special interest and prepare a brief
description of the work to be undertaken in
cooperation with their advisor.
CE 57000 ADVANCED STRUCTURAL MECHANICS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Studies in stress and strain, failure theories, and yield criteria;
flexure and torsion theories for solid and thin-walled members;
and energy methods.
.
|
|
|
|
return
to top
|
| |
Electrical
and Computer Engineering (ECE)
ECE 20100 LINEAR CIRCUIT ANALYSIS I
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 16300 and MA 16400 and PHYS 15200
Co-requisite: ECE 20700, MA 26100, PHYS 26100
Volt-Ampere characteristics of circuit elements;
independent and
dependent sources; Kirchoff's Laws and circuit
equations. source
transformations; Thevenin's and Norton's
Theorems; Superposition.
Transient response of RC, RL and RLC circuits.
Sinusoidal
steady-state and impedance. Instantaneous and
average power.
Aminimum grade of C is required for the course
prerequisites.
ECE 20200 LINEAR CIRCUIT ANALYSIS II
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 20100 Co-requisite: ECE 21800, MA
26400
A continuation of ECE 20100. The complex frequency
plane;
resonance; coupled circuits. Two-port network
parameters.
Polyphase analysis. Fourier series; Fourier
Transform;
Laplace Transform.
ECE 20700 ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
Co-requisite: ECE 20100
Introduction to basic instrumentation and
measurement techniques;
introduction to the experimental methods
necessary
for laboratory investigation. Introduction to
laboratory report
writing methods. The student is introduced to
computer-aided
circuit analysis methods.
ECE 21800 LINEAR CIRCUITS LABORATORY II
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
Co-requisite: ECE 20200
A continuation of ECE 20700, with the introduction
of
advanced measurement methods and more
sophisticated
instrumentation.
ECE 23300 MICRO COMPUTERS IN ENGINEERING
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ENGR 16000 Co-requisite: ECE 20100,ECE
20700
An introduction to microcomputers and
microcontrollers with
emphasis on single board embedded systems;
gates, memory,
microcomputer hardware, data representation,
programming,
input/output, interfacing, analog to digital
conversion, digital
to analog conversion, transducers, sensors,
actuators, and the
design and development of turnkey systems.
ECE 25100 OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ENGR 15200
The C++ and Java programming languages are
presented.
Students will be introduced to classes,
inheritance, polymorphism,
class derivation, abstract classes, interfaces,
function
overloading, container classes and template
classes.
ECE 27500 ELECTRONICS DEVICES
(Class 3, Lab. 3, Cr. 4)
Prerequisite: ECE 20200 and ECE 21800
Electronic amplifiers; operational amplifier
circuits; diode
characteristics and circuit applications;
bipolar junction transistor
(BJT) and MOSFET characteristics, operating
modes
biasing, linear amplifier configurations; ideal
characteristics
of logic devices; basic logic devices using BJTs
and MOSFETs.
ECE 29100 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE I
Practice in industry and comprehensive written
report of this
practice. This course is for Cooperative
Education Students Only.
ECE 29200 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE II
Practice in industry and comprehensive written
report of this
practice. This course is for Cooperative
Education students only.
ECE 30100 SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 20200 or ME 32500 and MA 26500
Continuous and discrete signal and system
analysis and representation.
Fourier Series and transforms, Bobe plots,
sampling
and discrete Fourier transforms, Laplace
Transforms Transient
response characteristics, Discrete-time systems
difference
equations, Z-Transforms, S-plane to Z-plane
mappings and
stability relationships. Continuous and discrete
systems:
convolution, state space representation, and
solution of
state equations.
ECE 30200 PROBABILISTIC METHODS IN
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 26500 and ECE 20200 or ME 32500 and
ECE 301000
An introductory treatment of probability theory
including distribution
and density functions, moments and random
variables. Applications
of normal and exponential distributions.
Estimation of means, variances,
correlation, and spectral density functions.
Random processes
and responses of linear systems to random
inputs.
ECE 31100 ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC FIELDS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 26400 and PHYS 26100
Continued study of vector calculus,
electrostatics, and magnetostatics.
Maxwell's equations. Introduction to
electromagnetic
waves, transmission lines, and radiation from
antennas.
ECE 31200 ENGINEERING PROJECT MANAGEMENT
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Introduction to principles of engineering
project management
and techniques. Topics include technical
feasibility studies,
project specifications, scheduling, validation,
lifecycles costing,
and economic analysis. The focus is on managing
an engineering
project through scheduling, budgeting, resource
management,
execution and control.
ECE 33000 MICROCOMPUTER
PROGRAMMING AND INTERFACING
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Pre Co-requisite: ECE 37000
Assembly language, C++ programming, and
interfacing techniques;
control of digital hardware and peripheral
devices by
software; software structures and tools used in
accomplishing
low level hardware control.
ECE 33500 ELECTRONICS-SYSTEMS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 27500
Topics in multistage amplifiers, feedback
amplifiers, oscillators,
operational amplifiers, analog systems, power
amplifiers
and systems, communication systems.
ECE 37000 DIGITAL SYSTEMS-LOGIC DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ENGR 16000
Introduction to the logical design and analysis
of digital
systems; Boolean algebra; combinational logic;
minimization
techniques; Karnaugh mapping. Introduction to
sequential
systems analysis and design.
ECE 37100 MICROPROCESSOR SYSTEMS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 37000
Microprocessor based system design; system bus
organization;
CPU design. Interfacing RAM and ROM memories to
microprocessors;
input-output techniques; peripheral interfacing
and interface standards. Application of CAD
software to the
design of microcomputer systems.
ECE 37500 DIGITAL INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 27500
Analysis and design of digital electronic
circuits. Bipolar and
MOS device modeling. MOS integrated circuit
design and
timing considerations. Bipolar, BiCMOS and GaAs
digital
circuits. monostable, and astable multivibrators.
Introduction
to A/D and D/A converters.
ECE 38000 COMPUTERS IN ENGINEERING ANALYSIS
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 23300 and MA 26400 and MA 26500
Theory and application of computers in
simulation, data
acquisition control, instrumentation, and in the
solution of
engineering problems. Development of
mathematical models
suitable for computer solutions, and numerical
techniques.
Traditional and modern software such as FORTRAN,
C,
LabVIEW, MATLAB, Lotus 1-2-3 and Excel will be
used.
ECE 38400 LINEAR CONTROL SYSTEMS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 30100
Introduction to classical control theory.
Transfer functions,
block diagram manipulation, and signal flow
graphs.
Transient and steady state responses;
charactertistics, and
design. Sensitivity analysis and disturbance
rejection. System
stability. Roor locus analysis and design.
Frequency response
analysis using Bode and polar plots. Nyquist
criterion and
Nichols chart. Controller design using Blode
plots. Statespace
description. Design of state-feedback
controllers and
controllers and observers.
ECE 39300 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE III
Practice in industry and comprehensive written
report of this
practice. For Cooperative Education students
only.
ECE 39400 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE IV
For co-operative engineering students only. Must
be accept
for the co-op program by the co-operative
engineering representative.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written
report of this practice.
ECE 39500 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE V
For co-operative engineering students only. Must
be accepted
for the co-op program by the co-operative
engineering representative.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written
report of this practice.
ECE 42600 ELECTRIC DRIVES
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 27500 and ECE 31100
Introduction to electric drives and power
electronics.
Magnetic circuits and transformers. Principles
of dc, synchronous,
induction, and stepper motors; equivalent
circuits
and operating characteristics. Applications to
drive systems.
Laboratory experiments to illustrate principles.
ECE 42900 SENIOR ENGINEERING DESIGN I
(Class 1, Lab. 3, Cr. 2)
The senior engineering design courses I and II
constitute a
two semester sequence of an interdisciplinary
activity. The
objective of these courses is to provide
engineering students
with supervised experience in the process and
practice of
engineering design. Projects are chosen by the
students of the
faculty. Students working in teams pursue an
idea from conception
to realistic design. The course is climaxed by
the
presentation of a substantial written report and
a formal oral
presentation before faculty and students.
ECE 43000 COMPUTER MEMORIES AND I/O
(Class 2, Lab. 2, Cr. 3)
Introduction to memories, input/output devices,
and optical
processors. Design considerations, hardware, and
software
aspects of system design and interfacing.
ECE 43200 ELEMENTS OF POWER SYSTEM ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 42600
Fundamental concepts of power systems analysis,
transmission
line parameters, basic system models,
steady-state performance,
network calculations, power flow solutions,
fault studies, symmetrical
components, operating strategies and control.
ECE 43900 SENIOR ENGINEERING DESIGN II
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 42900
The senior engineering design courses I and II
constitute a
two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary
activity. The
objective of these courses is to provide
engineering students
with supervised experience in the process and
practice of
engineering design. Projects are chosen by the
students or
faculty. Students working in teams pursue an
idea from conception
to realistic design. The course is climaxed by
the
presentation of a substantial written report and
formal oral
presentation before faculty and students.
ECE 44800 INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION THEORY
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 30200 and ECE 30100 and ECE 27500
Signal analysis, introduction to digital
communication and pulse
code modulation. Introduction to amplitude
modulation and frequency
modulation. Introduction to information theory.
ECE 45100 INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 37000
Operating principles, design, and application of
programmable
logic controllers. Data acquisition and data
analysis using
PCs: A to D and D to A converters, sensors and
actuators,
process variable measurement, signal
conditioning: data
acquisition and control software applications.
ECE 45900 ADVANCED DIGITAL SYSTEM DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 37000
Design, simulation, and testing of digital
systems using a
hardware description language and programmable
logic
devices Complex programmable logic devices (CPLDs)
and
field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) will be
studied and
utilized. Laboratory will include design,
simulation implementation,
and testing of designs on available FPGA/CPLD
boards.
ECE 46400 COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE
AND ORGANIZATION
(Class 3, Lab. 3, Cr. 4)
Prerequisite: ECE 37100
Design of computer systems with emphasis on
computer architecture.
Topics discussed include: Fundamentals of
Computer
Design, Instruction set principles and Examples,
Pipelining,
Advanced Pipelining and Instruction-Level
Parallelism,
Memory-Hierarchy Design, I/O Systems, Buses and
Arbitration
Techniques, Interconnection Networks, and
Multiprocessors.
ECE 46800 DESIGN OF COMPUTER SYSTEMS PROGRAMS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 37100
The design of systems programs, in particular,
operating systems,
assemblers, loaders, and compilers. The role of
systems
programs as the link between computer hardware
and software
is emphasized. Topics include: problems of
assembling
and loading microcomputer codes, macroprocessors,
memory
management, implementation of high level
language features
and special purpose language compilers. Projects
illustrating
the applications of the fundamental concepts to
the design
and construction of working systems programs are
required.
ECE 47600 DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 30100 and ECE 23300
Theory and implementation of real time digital
signal processing.
Survey or continuous filter design using
Butterworth,
Chebychev, inverse Chebychev, elliptic, and
Bessel approximations;
type transformations; review of sampling theory,
discrete time signals and systems, and
Z-transforms; design
of IIR filters using impulse invariance,
bilinear transform,
and a survey of direct techniques; design of FIR
filters using
Fourier series and windows, least squares error,
and optimal
equiripple techniques; properties and
applications of discrete
and fast Fourier transforms. Overview of
spectual estimation
techniques. Laboratory includes implementation
of lecture
topics.
ECE 48300 DIGITAL CONTROL
SYSTEMS-ANALYSIS AND DESIGN
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 38200 or ME 48500
An introduction to computer-controlled systems
from both
the state variable and z-transform points of
view, along with
sampling theory and its effect on digital
control design.
Design of digital controllers from the state
space and frequency
domain points of view.
ECE 49500 SELECTED TOPICS
IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
(Class 1 to 4, Lab. 1 to 4, Cr. 1 to 4)
Special topics in electrical engineering
ECE 49600 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING PROJECTS
Special project will vary. Hours and credits to
be arranged.
ECE 51900 CONTROL THEORY II
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 38200 or ME 48500
The approximation of common non-linearities by
describing
functions and the analysis of resultant system
behavior.
Review of matrix analysis. Statespace
formulation, representation,
solution and design. Introduction to
optimization and
computational methods.
ECE 53200 COMPUTATIONAL METHODS
FOR POWER SYSTEM ANALYSIS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 43200
System modeling and matrix analysis of
three-phase power
networks. Applications of numerical methods and
computers
to the solution of a variety of problems related
to the planning,
design and operation of electric power systems.
ECE 54400 DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 44800
Introduction to digital Communication systems
and spread
spectrum communications. Topics include analog
message
digitization, signal space representation of
digital signals,
binary and M-ary signaling methods, detection of
binary and
M-ary signals, comparison of digital
communication systems
in terms of signal energy and signal bandwidth
requirements.
The principal types of spread spectrum systems
are analyzed
and compared. Application of spread spectrum to
multiple
access systems and to secure communication
systems is discussed.
ECE 54700 INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTER
COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
A qualitative and quantitative study of the
issues in design,
analysis, and operation of computer
communication networks
as they evolve toward the integrated networks of
the future,
employing both packet and circuit switching
technology. The
course covers packet and circuit switching, the
OSI standards
architecture and protocols, elementary queuing
theory for
performance evaluation, random access
techniques, local area
networks reliability and error recovery, and
integrated networks.
ECE 55400 ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTATION
AND CONTROL CIRCUITS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 33500 and ECE 30100
Analysis and design of special amplifiers, pulse
circuits,
operational circuits, d-c amplifiers, and
transducers used in
instrumentation, control, and computation.
ECE 58900 STATE ESTIMATION & PARAMETER ID
OF STOCHASTIC SYSTEMS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Introduction to point estimation, least squares,
Bayes risk and
maximum likelihood. Optimum mean-square
recursive estimation
for non-dynamic stochastic systems. State
estimation
for discrete-time and continuous-time dynamic
systems.
Parameter identification of stochastic
approximation, least
squares, and random search algorithms.
ECE 59500 SELECTED TOPICS IN ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING
(Class 0 to 3, Cr. 1 to 3)
Formal classroom or individualized instruction
on topics of
current interest.
ECE 60200 LUMPED SYSTEM THEORY
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 30100
An investigation of the basic theory and
techniques of modern
system theory, emphasizing linear state model
formulations
of continuous and discrete time systems in the
time
domain and frequency domain. Coverage includes
notions of
linearity, time invariance, discrete and
continuous time state
models, canonical forms, associated transfer
functions and
impulse response models, the state transition
matrix, the Jordan
form, controllability, observability, and
stability. stability.
ECE 60400 ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELD THEORY
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 31100
Review of general concepts (Maxwell¡¯s
equations, materials
interaction, boundary conditions, energy flow);
statics
(LaPlace's equation, Poisson's equation);
distributed parameter
systems (classification of solutions,
transmission lines,
and waveguides); radiation and antennas (arrays,
reciprocity,
Huygen's principle); a selected special topic
(e.g. magnetostatics,
waves in anisotropic media and optical fibers).
ECE 60600 SOLID-STATE DEVICES
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
A relatively-broad moderate-depth coverage of
semiconductor
devices and related topics. The first portion of
the course
presents and examines semiconductor fundamentals
required
in the operational analysis of solid state
devices. Adetailed
examination of the PN junction diode and PN
junction devices
follows. The final portion of the course treats
heterojunction
surface devices including the Schottky diode,
the MOS
capacitor and the MOSFET.
ECE 67200 SYNTHESIS AND DESIGN OF ANALOG FILTERS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 30100
Positive real functions. Synthesis of LC, RC,
and RLC oneports.
Synthesis of LC two-ports. Synthesis of singly
terminated
and doubly terminated lossless two-ports. Design
of
equalizers. Design of active filters using
operational amplifiers.
The sensitivity problem.
ECE 68000 MODERN AUTOMATIC CONTROL THEORY
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 60200
Theoretical methods in optimal control theory.
Topics include
the calculus of variations and the Pontyagin
minimum energy
problems. Geometric methods will be applied to
the solution
of minimum time problems. Computational methods,
singular
problems, observer theory, and sufficient
conditions for
existence of solutions are also discussed.
observer theory, and
sufficient conditions for existence of solutions
are also discussed.
|
| |
|
return to top
|
| |
Engineering (ENGR)
ENGR 14000 PROGRAMMING FOR ENGINEERS
(Class 2, Cr. 2)
Prerequisite: MA 15900
An introduction to computer programming and design with
emphasis on engineering applications. The organization of
programming logic which is applicable to all computer languages.
The C++ programming language will be introduced
and used to implement structured programming designs.
ENGR 15100 SOFTWARE TOOLS FOR ENGINEERS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 15900
Introduction to MATLAB and engineering problem solving,
with MATLAB. Students will be introduced to arrays rational
and logical operations, control flow of sequence, selection
and repetition, function definition, 2-D and 3-D graphics,
data analysis, Graphical Used Interface (GUI) development,
and Simulink.
ENGR 15200 PROGRAMMING FOR ENGINEERS
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ENGR 15100
Introductory C programming course. Students will be introduced
to basic syntax, standard mathematics library, control
structures, user-defined functions, arrays, pointers, structures,
and file I/Os. Laboratory exercises will accelerate learning of
fundamental materials through supervised practice.
ENGR 16000 SOFTWARE TOOLS FOR ENGINEERS
(Class 2, Cr. 2)
Prerequisite: ENGR 14000
An introduction to packaged software solutions designed for
engineering applications. Emphasis will be on MATLAB and
Simulink packages with direct applications to engineering
problems.
ENGR 18600 FIRST YEAR SEMINAR FOR ENGINEERS
(Class 1, Cr. 1)
The course will provide the foundations for students enabling
them to: learn to succeed, work together in teams, understand
the field chosen for study and orient them to university life
and environs.
ENGR 19000 ELEMENTARY ENGINEERING DESIGN
(Class 1, Lab. 3, Cr. 2)
Prerequisite: MA 159
An introduction to engineering design.
ENGR 19500 FRESHMAN ENGINEERING PROJECTS
(Class 1 to 3, Lab. 0 to 6, Cr. 1 to 3)
Topics vary
ENGR 22000 INTRODUCTORY ENGINEERING III
(Class 1, Cr. 1)
Prerequisite: ENGR 16000
Continuation of ENGR 16000. Further lectures on the engineering
profession and a continuation of computer programming design
and implementation. Emphasis on engineering applications.
|
| |
|
return to top
|
| |
Industrial Engineering
(I E)
|
IE 53000 QUALITY CONTROL
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: IE 33000 or STAT 51600
Principles and practices of statistical quality control in
industry. Control charts for measurements and for attributes.
Acceptance sampling by attributes and by measurements.
Standard sampling plans. Sequential analysis. Sampling
inspection of continuous production.
IE 53600 STOCHASTIC MODELS IN
OPERATIONS RESEARCH I
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: IE 33600
An introduction to techniques for modeling random processes
used in operations research. Markov chains, continuous
time Markov processes, Markovian queues, reliability and
inventory models.
IE 59000 TOPICS IN IDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
(Class 0 to 6, Lab. 0 to 18, Cr. 1 to 6)
Credit and hours to be arranged. Selected topics in industrial
engineering for seniors and graduate students. May be
repeated with permission of advisor.
|
|
|
| |
Mechanical Engineering
(M E)
ME/CE 11500 ENGINEERING DRAWING I
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
A technical drawing course covering engineering geometry,
orthographic projection, auxiliary views,
dimensioning,
and tolerance using sketching techniques, and
2-D CAD. ME/CE 11600 ENGINEERING DRAWING II
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
Prerequisite: ME/CE 11500 with a C or better A
continuation of the technical drawing course covering
3-D parametic modeling, part assembly modeling,
and detail and assembly drawings.
ME 27100/CE 27101 BASIC MECHANICS I (STATICS)
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 16300 and MA 16400 and PHYS 15200 Co-requisite: MA 26100
Review of vector algebra and equilibrium. Hydrostatics,
virtual work, static stability, friction. First and second
moments of areas, volumes, and masses, center of gravity. A
minimum grade of C is required for the course prerequisites.
ME/CE 27500 BASIC MECHANICS II (DYNAMICS)
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 26100 and ME 27100/CE 27101
Fundamental concepts, kinematics, translation and rotation.
Kinetics impulse, momentum, work, energy. Rectilinear and
curvilinear translation of point masses. Plane motion of rigid
bodies and vibration.
ME 29100 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE I
For co-operative engineering students only
Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice.
ME 29200 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE II
For co-operative engineering students only.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice.
ME 30500 GENERAL THERMODYNAMICS I
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 261
Properties of pure substances, work and heat, first and second
laws of thermodynamics, entropy, irreversibility and availability,
power and refrigeration cycles, thermodynamic relations.
ME 306000 GENERAL THERMODYNAMICS II
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 305
Thermodynamic relations. Power and refrigeration cycles,
methods of thermodynamic analysis, technical thermodynamics
and design, energy conversion. Thermodynamics of combustion
processes and equilibrium.
ME 31100 ENGINEERING PROJECT MANAGEMENT
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Introduction of principles of engineering project management
and techniques. Topics include technical feasibility studies,
project specifications, scheduling, validation, lifecycle costing,
and economic analysis. The focus is on managing an
engineering project through scheduling, budgeting, resource
management, execution and control.
ME/CE 31200 FLUID MECHANICS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MA 264 and ME 275
Continuum, velocity field, fluid statics, basic conservation
laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis,
Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layer
flow in channels and around submerged bodies, one-dimensional
gas dynamics.
ME/CE 31300 FLUID MECHANICS LABORATORY
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
Pre or Co-requisite: ME/CE 31200
Introduction to fluid mechanics laboratory, experiments on
flow patterns, velocity profile in an air pipe, wind tunnel calibration,
draining of a tank, pipe friction, boundary layer studies,
falling ball experiments, and viscosity measurements.
ME 32000 KINEMATIC ANALYSIS AND DESIGN
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME/CE 27500
Graphical, analytical, and computer techniques for analyzing
displacements, velocities, and accelerations in mechanisms.
Analysis and design of linkages, cams and gears. Laboratory
projects include analysis, design, construction, and evaluation
of mechanisms.
ME 32500 DYNAMICS OF PHYSICAL SYSTEMS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ECE 20100 and ME/CE 27500
Development and solution of linear models; translational and
rotational mechanical systems, electrical systems, electromechanical
systems, thermal systems, hydraulic systems. The
Laplace transform, transfer functions, and Bode plots, state
variable representation and solutions. Computer analysis and
simulation.
ME 34500 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING EXPERIMENTATION
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 27300 and ME 32500
Mechanical measurements and methods of experimentation.
Calibration standards, statistical replication and error minimization,
transducers and instrumentation, dimensional analysis and
the design of an experiment. Laboratory experiments will
require formal reports and will deal with displacements, velocities,
pressures, and elastics strains.
ME 39300 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE III
For co-operative engineering students only.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice.
ME 39400 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE IV
For co-operative engineering students only.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice.
ME 39500 INDUSTRIAL PRACTICE V
For co-operative engineering students only.
Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice.
ME 41600 HEAT TRANSFER
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 30500 and ME/CE 31200 and ME/CE 31300 Co-requisite: ME 41700
Steady state and transient heat transfer by conduction,
laminar and turbulent convection, firm condensation and
boiling, and by radiation. Combined heat and mass transfer
by diffusion and convection. The analysis and design of
heat exchangers for process heat transfer.
ME 41700 HEAT TRANSFER LAB
(Lab. 3, Cr. 1)
Pre or Co-requisite: ME 41600
Heat transmission laboratory with measurements of temperature
and flows. Experiments include temperature profiles in
solids, thermal conductivity, radiation, and the determination
of various heat and mass transfer coefficients.
ME 42600 HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING ANALYSIS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 41600
Psychometrics, air conditioning systems, equipment selection,
duct design and piping design. Heating and cooling
loads, solar radiation and heat transmission in buildings.
Heat pumps. Application of air conditioning to residences,
computer rooms, light commercial and high-rise buildings.
ME 42900 SENIOR ENGINEERING DESIGN I
The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a
two semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The
objective of these courses is to provide engineering students
with supervised experience in the process and practice of
engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or
the faculty. Students working in teams pursue a idea from
conception to realistic design. The course is climaxed by the
presentation of a substantial written report and a formal oral
presentation before faculty and students.
ME 43900 SENIOR ENGINEERING DESIGN II
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 42900
The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a
two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The
objective of these courses is to provide engineering students
with supervised experience in the process and practice of
engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or
faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception
to realistic design. The course is climaxed by the
presentation of a substantial written report and a formal
oral presentation before faculty and students.
ME 46100 MACHINE DESIGN I
(Class 3, Lab. 3, Cr. 4)
Prerequisite: CE 27300 and ME 34500
Application of mechanics and mechanics of materials to the
analysis and design of machine elements. Stress and deflection
analysis, statistical considerations under steady and variable
loading, stress principles applied to fasteners, springs,
welded joints, and general mechanical elements. Fits and tolerances.
Antifriction Gearings. Spur gears. Laboratory includes
projects, solutions of design problems, and experiments.
ME 46600 MACHINE DESIGN II
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 32000 and ME 46100
Comprehensive study in the design and analysis of gearing,
rolling and journal bearings, clutches and brakes, and flexible
mechanical elements. Introduction to reliability engineering.
Laboratory includes projects and solution of design problems.
ME 48500 LINEAR CONTROL SYSTEMS
(Class 2, Lab. 1, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 32500
Introduction to classical control theory. Transfer functions,
block diagram manipulation, and signal flow graphs.
Transient and steady state responses; characteristics, and
design. Sensitivity analysis and disturbance rejection. System
stability. Root locus analysis and design. Frequency response
analysis using Bode and polar plots. Nyquist criterion and
Nichols chat. Controller design using Bode plots. Laboratory
will include design, simulation of topics covered, and a
number of practical experiments. Credit is not allowed for
both ECE 384 and ME 485.
ME 48600 INTRODUCTION TO
MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 27300 and MSE 20000
Modern manufacturing processes and methods including
forming, shaping, machining, and joining. Productivity,
quality improvement, material and energy conservation,
automatic processing and inspection, process planning,
manufacturing control, robotics, CAD, CAM, and computer
integrated manufacturing.
ME 49700 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING PROJECTS
(Class 0 to 6, Lab. 0 to 18, Cr. 1 to 6)
May be repeated for credit Junior standing or higher required
Projects or special topics of contemporary importance or of special
interest that are outside the scope of the standard undergraduate
curriculum can be studied under the Mechanical Engineering
Projects course. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor
by meeting with individual faculty members who work in their
area of special interest and prepare a brief description of the
work to be undertaken in cooperation with their
advisor.
ME 50000 ADVANCED THERMODYNAMICS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 30600
The empirical, physical basis of the laws of thermodynamics.
Availability concepts and applications. Properties and relations
between properties in homogeneous and heterogeneous systems.
The criteria of equilibrium. Application to variety of systems
and problems including phase and reaction equilibrium.
ME 50500 INTERMEDIATE HEAT TRANSFER
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 41600
Heat and mass transfer by diffusion in one-dimensional,
two-dimensional, transient, periodic, and phase change
systems. Convective heat transfer for external and internal
flows. Similarity and integral solution methods. Heat, mass,
and momentum analogies. Turbulence. Buoyancy driven
flows. Convection with phase change. Radiation exchange
between surfaces and radiation transfer in absorbing-emitting
media. Multimode heat transfer problems.
ME 50900 FLUID PROPERTIES. BASIC LAWS
FOR A CONTROL VOLUME.
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME/CE 31200
Kinematics of fluid flow. Dynamics of frictionless incompressible
flow and basic hydrodynamics. Equations of motion
for viscous flow, viscous flow applications, boundary layer
theory. Wall turbulence, lift and drag of immersed bodies.
ME 51300 ENGINEERING ACOUSTICS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisites: Senior standing or consent of instructor required
The simple oscillator. Lumped acoustical elements. Electromechanical-
acoustical analogies. Wave motion in strings and
membranes. Introduction to linear acoustics through derivation
of the wave equation and simple solutions. Plane and spherical
waves. Acoustic intensity. Plane wave transmission through
fluid layers and simple barriers. Sound absorption. Modeling
of acoustical sources: monopoles, dipoles, quadrupoles.
Mechanisms of sound generations and directionality. Sound
propagation in one-dimensional systems. Introduction to room
acoustics. Professirs Bolton and Mongeau.
ME 56000 KINEMATICS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: ME 32000
Geometry of constrained plane motion with applications to
linkage design. Type and number synthesis. Path curvature,
inflection circle, cubic of stationary curvature. Finite displacements,
three and four separated positions. Graphical,
analytical, and computer techniques.
ME 56300 MECHANICAL VIBRATIONS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CE 27300 and ME 32500
Review of system with one degree of freedom. LaGrange¡¯s
equations of motion for multiple degree of freedom systems.
Introduction to matrix methods. Transfer functions for
harmonic response, impulse response, and step response.
Convolution integrals for response to arbitrary inputs.
Principle frequencies and modes. Applications to critical
speeds, measuring instruments, isolation, torsional systems.
Introduction to nonlinear problems.
ME 57500 THEORY AND DESIGN OF CONTROL SYSTEMS
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Covers the analysis and design of control systems from both
a classical and modern viewpoint. with emphasis on design
of controllers. Classical control design is reviewed, including
both root locus and Bode domain design methodologies. The
state space representation is introduced, along with notions of
stability, controlling, and observability. State feedback controllers
for pole placement and state observers are discussed
with emphasis on their frequency domain implications.
ME 59700 ADVANCED MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING PROJECTS I
(Class 0 to 6, Lab. 0 to 18, Cr. 1 to 6)
Prerequisites: Must be masters standing.
May be repeated for credit. Projects or special topics of contemporary
importance or of special interest that are outside
the scope of the standard graduate curriculum can be studied
under the Mechanical Engineering Projects course. Interested
students should seek a faculty advisor by meeting with individual
faculty members who work in their area of special
interest and prepare a brief description of the work to be
undertaken in cooperation with their advisor.
ME 698 M.S. THESIS
(Class 1 to 18, Lab. 0 to 54, Cr. 1 to 18)
|
| |
|
return to top
|
| |
Materials Engineering
(MSE)
MSE 20000 MATERIALS SCIENCE
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: CHM 11500
An introductory course designed to provide a basic background
in the broad field of materials science. Emphasis
placed on the chemical and physical principles underlying
the utilization and behavior of metals, alloys ceramics,
composites, and aggregates in engineering.
MSE 34400 MATERIALS IN ENGINEERING
(Class 2, Lab. 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MSE 20000
Introduction to the structure and mechanical and physical
properties of engineering materials. Selection of metals,
alloys, plastics, ceramics, and composites for engineering
applications. Strengthening methods and environmental
effects. Analysis of the failure of materials under load.
Laboratory experiments include mechanical testing, metallography,
thermal treatment, and failure analysis.
MSE 38500 NONDESTRUCTIVE TESTING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Prerequisite: MSE 20000 and PHYS 26100
Basic principles and common application of nondestructive
testing methods. The laws of physics are used to evaluate
mechanical and physical properties of materials. The NDT
methods cover magnetic, penetrants, eddy current, ultrasonic,
radiography, and specialized methods.
MSE 59700 SELECTED TOPICS
IN MATERIAL ENGINEERING
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Hours and credits to be arranged.¡¡
return to top
Aeronautical and
Astronautical Engineering(A&AE)
A&AE 550Q MULTIDISCIPLINARY
DESIGN OPTIMIZATION
(Class 3, Cr. 3)
Basics of numerical optimization:problem formulation,
conditions of optimality, search direction and step length.
Calculus-based techniques for univariate and multivariate
optimiztion. Constrained and unconstrained optimization
methods. Multiobjective optimization: Pareto optimality and
approaches. Recent Multidisciplinary Design Optimization
techniques:approximations, response surface methodology, and
collaborative optimization. Applications of various methods
and techniques to representative engineering problems,
culminating in a final projects.
|
|
|
return to top
|
|