Want this question answered?
no, mechanical is best!
96 to 97%
Engineering Mechanical,Chemical,Electronics or Electrical thumbs up!
you can get a job if you have a degree of (Mechanical/ Electrical/ Civil) from a recognized University and an age Limit: Max. 35 years
this is not true mechanical engg. is good for ip university
Only the University you wish to study at can answer that question
Most engineers have a four-year bachelor's degree in their field of study. Degrees in electrical, mechanical and civil engineering are the most common. According to Michigan State University, electrical engineering focuses on the design and development of electrical products and equipment. Students learn how to create and alter electrical circuits, electrical motors, generators and transformers.
Mechanical Engineering Department of Amirkabir University of Technology was created in 1957.
A&M stands for "agricultural and mechanical" so for Florida, the full title would be "Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University"
University of Belgrade Faculty of Electrical Engineering was created in 1894.
These are Universities offering Masters in Instrumentation Engineering: Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Clemson University Clemson, SC Program in Electrical Engineering Colorado Technical University Colorado Springs, CO Program in Electrical Engineering Colorado Technical University Denver Campus Greenwood Village, CO Program in Electrical Engineering Columbia University New York, NY Department of Electrical Engineering Drexel University Philadelphia, PA Program in Electrical Engineering Duke University Durham, NC Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Fairleigh Dickinson University, Metropolitan Campus Teaneck, NJ Program in Electrical Engineering Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne, FL Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Florida International University Miami, FL Program in Electrical Engineering Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago, IL Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD Part-time Program in Electrical and Computer Engineering Northwestern University Evanston, IL Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Oregon State University Corvallis, OR School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Polytechnic Institute of NYU Brooklyn, NY Major in Electrical Engineering Princeton University Princeton, NJ Department of Electrical Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY Program in Electrical Engineering Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY Program in Electric Power Engineering Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick New Brunswick, NJ Program in Electrical and Computer Engineering Southern Illinois University Carbondale Carbondale, IL Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Stanford University Stanford, CA Department of Management Science and Engineering Stony Brook University, State University of New York Stony Brook, NY Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering The University of Arizona Tucson, AZ Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of California, Riverside Riverside, CA Department of Electrical Engineering University of California, Santa Cruz Santa Cruz, CA Department of Electrical Engineering University of Idaho Moscow, ID Program in Electrical Engineering University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago, IL Program in Electrical and Computer Engineering
Depending on the university you attend, yes or no. At my university, the answer would be no. However, there are fields such as bio-mechanical engineering, Mechatronics/robotics, and nanotechnology. Look at it this way, a mechanical engineer is the broadest category out there. Anything that has a moving part involves mechanical engineers, regardless of field or application.