I am studying Electronics Engineering and 1/4 of my first year was material science that I do not think I will ever use. Then 1/12 of my second year was quantum mechanics which included some chemistry but was more physics.
Marine engineering is like the fancy option, where Chemistry is the foundation upon which all else is built.
in this univers every action should be related with chemistry....the life of every living thing should be relte with chemistry...the importenseof chestry in engineering also is veryimportent....for the betterment of next generation........
Chemistry is mainly for engineering courses & an architecture course would mainly need physics.
None, I'd suggest. Can't think of any reasonable thing.What is the relevance of this question.
Not much, you probably will need general chemistry and another chem related course, and that's about it. Math, physics are the 2 main subjects that you have to be good at in order to earn a degree in electrical engineering.
Yes chemistry plays an important role in engineering. There is a special engineering course named chemical engineering, further every first year engineering student studies chemistry. As an example if a mechanical engineer knows the chemical composition of alloys and metals it will be useful. Similarly for a civil engineer to avoid corrosion of the steel bars inside concrete he/she has to know the chemical composition of concrete and the steel rod. There are many other examples.
Typically, all engineering fields require chemistry as well as physics as a part of the engineering curriculum.
importance of weathering in civil engineering
Apparently, you haven't had much exposure to Physics, Chemistry, or Engineering, have you. Yes, they all do. In increasing order of mathematical intensity, they are Chemistry Engineering Physics
chemistry is the branch of science that deals with the study of matter atoms and principles . the importance of chemistry is given as under. the importance of chemistry is that chemistry helps us to understand the nature of our environment and about ourselves.
general inorganic chemistry
For Physics and Engineering yes, but not so much for Chemistry.