punctual careful,must know a lots of chemistry,maths and physics
For Chemical Engineering Aspen Plus or Dynachem are good programs
James H. Weber has written: 'BASIC programs for chemical engineering design' -- subject(s): BASIC (Computer program language), Chemical engineering, Computer programs
There are five basic areas of engineering: * Aerospace Engineering. * Chemical Engineering. * Civil Engineering. * Electrical Engineering. * Mechanical Engineering. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on engineering. You can read a little bit about each one of these specialty areas there.
Basic quantities are physical quantities that are independent and cannot be defined in terms of other physical quantities, such as length, time, and mass. Derived quantities, on the other hand, are physical quantities that are defined in terms of one or more basic quantities, such as speed, acceleration, and force.
Basic quantities refers to the quantities from which the others are derived from. This is what is commonly referred to as SI units.
In physics, dimensions refer to the physical quantities such as length, time, and mass that are used to describe the properties of objects and phenomena. These dimensions are fundamental in defining and measuring various physical quantities. The dimensions of a physical quantity help in understanding how it relates to other quantities and how it can be expressed in terms of basic units.
Byte=8 Bits, is the basic data measuring unit.
Engineering is done with numbers.
Basic quantities are quantities which can be arrived at without performing any mathematical procedure. Derived quantities are those which can be arrived at only after performing mathematical procedure.
The four basic quantities of measurements are length (meter), mass (kilogram), time (second), and electric current (ampere).
There are seven basic fundamental quantities in physics: length, time, mass, electric current, temperature, amount of substance, and luminous intensity.
The eight basic fundamental quantities are length, mass, time, electric current, temperature, amount of substance, luminous intensity, and angle.