Yes.
Typically, no. An Aerospace Engineer and Aircraft Engineer are 2 different things in the same category. An Aerospace Engineer works on designing, creating, and brainstorming ideas on airplanes, and objects that fly in the Atmosphere, and no farther than Suborbital (Aeronautical Engineer). Another thing they do is design, build and brainstorm Rockets, Orbital Spacecraft, lunar and planetary landers, Space and Deep Space Probes, and Orbital Satellites. They also have different degrees. But they all focus on aircraft.
Aerospace engineers build aircraft
A clever and creative mechanical engineer is the person behind a great coaster.
There are several different paths that you can take if you are considering a career in Engineering Technology. You can become a civil engineer and help build roadways or a mechanical engineer and help develop machinery for manufacturing companies. You can even choose a career as an aerospace engineer and help develop airplanes and spacecraft.
The first pyrimids
Plane engineer
At the start build a CRANE then build a power plant in the crane and a REFINERY in the COMMAND CENTER, when the POWER PLANT is built, drop it down then build a BARRACKS and build an ENGINEER from it. When the REFINERY is built drop it down and build a COMMAND POST. When it is built drop it down. Build POWER PLANTS in both COMMAND CENTER and CRANE, and use the radar to see over the enemy base, use the ENGINEER to capture an enemy building, before it goes out of the build radius drop both POWER PLANTS on top of the ENGINEER and the ENGINEER will disappear and capture the enemy building auto-matically.
Aerospace Product and Parts Manufacturing
Depends what you're looking for, anything and everything.
Gustave Eiffel
Civil Engineer.
a mecanical engineer.