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Books

The document discusses the math and physics topics required for engineering including calculus, differential equations, numerical methods, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, and electromagnetic theory. It also lists recommended textbooks on these subjects.

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hrithik
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views1 page

Books

The document discusses the math and physics topics required for engineering including calculus, differential equations, numerical methods, electromagnetism, thermodynamics, and electromagnetic theory. It also lists recommended textbooks on these subjects.

Uploaded by

hrithik
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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r any engineering you need math and physics. So I’ll illustrate them first.

For
math:

Calculus:
Zill, Dennis G.; Wright, Warren S. Calculus: Early Transcendentals (4th edition).
Shynk, John J. Mathematical Foundations for Linear Circuits and Systems in
Engineering.
Multivariable calculus and vector analysis:
Larson, Ron; Edwards, Bruce H. Multivariable calculus (9th edition).
Differential equations:
Zill, Dennis G.; Wright, Warren S. Differential Equations with Boundary-Value
Problems (8th edition).
Numerical methods:
Chapra, Steven C.; Canale, Raymond P. Numerical Methods for Engineers (5th
edition).
For physics:

Basic electromagnetism:
Young; Freedman; Sears; Zemansky. University physics with modern physics, volume 2
(12th edition).
Douglas Giancoli. Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, volume
2 (4th edition).
Serway, Raymond A.; Vuille, Chris; Faughn, Jerry S. College Physics, volume 2 (8th
edition).
Thermodynamics:
Çengel, Yunus A.; Boles, Michael A. Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach (7th
edition).
Electromagnetic theory:
Hayt, William; Buck, John. Engineering Electromagnetics (8th edition).
Ulaby, Fawwaz T. Fundamentals of applied electromagnetics (5th edition).
Sadiku, Matthew. Elements of Electromagnetics (3rd edition).
Cheng, David K. Fundamentals of Engineering Electromagnetics (1st edition).
Griffiths, David J. Introduction to Electrodynamics (3rd edition)

1. Systems design engineering (To build/choose/edit the already known architecture)

2. Electronics engineering (To implement the 'design' in practical way such as


building & dealing with electronics board & circuit. It involve Logic-Design &
Physical-Design phases)

3. Electrical engineering (i guess involvement of this stream kicks in when the


topic is display/screen unit, power unit, battery levels, system sleep or standby
states etc)

4. Software engineering (Its involvement starts from OS installation, application


development, App maintenance, writing code or say device-drivers for various
peripherals which are part of the device. Example: writing code for device-driver
of PCI bus etc.)

There are many more fields which are sort of branches of the above mentioned base
fields such as: Firmware Engineering which is covered and taught in SW and
Electronics streams both (as it deals with both HW and SW both).

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