In petrochemical engineering, you will study the hydrocarbons mainly and the processes needed to extract the raw hydrocarbons. You will also study how those can be processed in manufacturing industry to produce other chemicals, plastics, fabrics and medicine, etc. It also encompasses the study of the earth to a depth of about 5km, the major geographical areas where petroleum is found and how to use geology to predict these areas. In school it is recommended to take the following classes: 1. Mathematics 2. English 3. Physics 4. Chemistry 5. Biology 6. Geography and/or Geology
The Answer to your question is NO, indeed this is a rumour and some one has been fooling with you. In fact maths is very much needed in engineering and used directly or indirectly in some or the other subject like Applied Physics, Electronic Devices and Circiuts, etc. So if you are good in maths you will bot fail engineering. And even if by bad luck you fail in any subject, then its not because you are good in maths, but because your efforts in that subject were not up to the mark.
$5,550
its all depends
You need an engineering degree at the very least.
chemistry add maths
In petrochemical engineering, you will study the hydrocarbons mainly and the processes needed to extract the raw hydrocarbons. You will also study how those can be processed in manufacturing industry to produce other chemicals, plastics, fabrics and medicine, etc. It also encompasses the study of the earth to a depth of about 5km, the major geographical areas where petroleum is found and how to use geology to predict these areas. In school it is recommended to take the following classes: 1. Mathematics 2. English 3. Physics 4. Chemistry 5. Biology 6. Geography and/or Geology
Chemistry, Physics and mathematics are absolute minimums. These days some computer science is also a prerequisite. A general engineering subject would also be highly useful. Corrosion would be studied and also material science.
study
to clone things.
how much education is needed to become a engineering psychologist
It is unlikely. While programming is not actually needed for some engineering. If you lack the problem solving skills needed for programming, you probably won't cut the mustard at engineering.
Chemistry, Physics and mathematics are absolute minimums. These days some computer science is also a prerequisite. A general engineering subject would also be highly useful. Corrosion would be studied and also material science.
Gaming and Engineering.
for ece engineering student to learn relating her to space nd aeronautics
The usage of trig. in Mechanical Engineering is extensive. Trig. is used in almost every branch of the subject, especially where quantitative answers are needed to real physical problems such as the size of stresses in structural parts or the volume and frequency of a vibration.
The Answer to your question is NO, indeed this is a rumour and some one has been fooling with you. In fact maths is very much needed in engineering and used directly or indirectly in some or the other subject like Applied Physics, Electronic Devices and Circiuts, etc. So if you are good in maths you will bot fail engineering. And even if by bad luck you fail in any subject, then its not because you are good in maths, but because your efforts in that subject were not up to the mark.