The difference between the aviation industry and aeronautical engineering is this:
The aviation industry is the totality of all that happens in aviation and aerospace. It can include the following components:
1. Aviation and aerospace manufacturing (manufacturing of aviation and space related items for the civil, military and space related segments of the industry);
2. The airlines: major, national, regional and all cargo
3. General Aviation: All flying EXCEPT that done by the military and my the scheduled airlines; and,
4. Government aviation including the military and non-military segments. Non-military aviation in the government sector would include the operation of airports or the regulation of civil aviation, for example.
Aeronautical engineering is a SUBSET (or part of) of the aviation industry. Normally, aerospace engineeers are employed in the aviation and aerospace manufacturing segment of the industry, although some also work for the airlines.
As far as job opportunities, aerospace engineeering in the USA numbers about 50,000 or so jobs out of a total of 2.1 to 2.2 million in aviation overall. The vast majority of jobs in aviation are operational in nature--pilots, flight attendants, aviation technicians, ramp agents, customer service agents, etc. For example, there are about 125,000 airline pilots in the USA. I do not have the worldwide numbers for these categories.....
As for colleges on these subjects: There are excellent aeropsace engineeering programs at MIT, the University of Illinois, Gerogia Tech and Stanford. There are excellent aviation degree programs at Embry Riddle Aero University, the University of North Dakota, Western Michigan University, The Ohio State University, Purdue University, Southern Illinois University Carbondale (where I work) and Parks College of St. Louis University.
...found at:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Aerospace-Aviation-2437/difference-aviation-aeronotical.htm
Aviation is the entire science of flying. Aircraft are the means to do it.
Global Aerospace supports the SM4 because it is an aviation safety program. The SM4 is a aviation safety seminar series geared towards make Global Aerospace a safer work environment and their missions the safest they could be.
if you have to ask this, then you don't deserve an answer
Can you study aerospace engineering in MTech after MSc in aviation in jntuh
Viscount Aerospace plays a crucial role in the aviation industry by providing specialized services and products for aircraft maintenance, repair, and overhaul. They help ensure the safety and efficiency of aircraft operations, contributing to the overall reliability of the aviation sector.
Aviation High School is located in New York. It specializes in training students who wish to pursue a career in aviation maintenance or the aerospace industry.
Aeronautical engineering focuses on flying in Earth's atmosphere while aerospace deals with objects outside Earth's atmosphere. aerospace engineering deals with objects inside and outside of earths atmosphere while aeronautical engineering is a more specialized field with aerospace engineering that focuses more on objects inside earths atmosphere. astronautical engineering deals with objects outside earths atmosphere and is another specialized field under aerospace engineering.
Russell B. Rayman has written: 'Clinical aviation medicine' -- subject(s): Aerospace medicine, Aviation medicine 'Clinical Aviation Medicine'
Flight Global provides information on aerospace, airlines, business and military aviation, jobs in aviation, historical information, air shows, and aviation news.
TRAMCO became the holding of BF GOODRICH AEROSPACE which became Aviation Technical Services (ATS) wich is open to this day.
Robert Calderone has written: 'The complete aviation/aerospace career guide' -- subject(s): Aeronautics, Aerospace industries, Vocational guidance
Aerospace is basically 'Rocket Science' and is separated into crafts that operates in the Earth's atmosphere and in space, and has to account for atmospheric pressures and the such. Aerophysics, on the other hand, has to do with the physical design and construction of aerodynamic objects, and has to account for the materialistic matters. In other words: Aerospace= theory of flying objects Aerophysics=physics of flying objects