Aerospace Engineering Reading Material for a Newbie

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
9 replies · 6K views
PraAnan
Messages
77
Reaction score
1
In the future I would really like to enroll in an aerospace engineering course and I was wondering if there are any good books out there which cover the important parts of this discipline?

I came across the following page which contains some of the topics that will be taught in university (at least at this particular one) http://www.herts.ac.uk/courses/Aerospace-Engineering-BEng_structure.cfm
Are there books which cover the whole range? I don't need them to go into full detail.

I'd like to buy a maximum of 3 books so advice is welcome.

There also seems to be a lot of new online courses as well as lecture videos, so are there any good aerospace ones available?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Anderson's Introduction to Flight is a common text used for introductory aerospace engineering courses, and give a brief overview of the major disciplines.
 
jhae2.718 said:
Anderson's Introduction to Flight is a common text used for introductory aerospace engineering courses, and give a brief overview of the major disciplines.

Thanks for letting me know about this book, a lot of people give it good reviews. I'll definitely be buying this.
 
Fundamentals of Aerodynamics - Anderson
Elements of Propulsion; Gas Turbines and Rockets - Mattingly
Aircraft Engine Design - Mattingly, Heiser, Pratt
Aircraft Performance and Design - Anderson
Aircraft Structures for Engineering Students - Megson
 
This might sound a little odd. I'm writing from the perspective of a (now grounded) pilot with no formal education. Reading a lot of "Private Pilot", "Plane and Pilot" or similar magazines might help because it will give you a user's-eye view of how things work. If you can afford it, even take a couple of introductory flight lessons. That's how I started: $5.00 and a coupon from the magazine got me my first half hour lesson.
Learning to fly involves a lot of the details of what keeps an iron bird in the air.
 
Danger said:
This might sound a little odd. I'm writing from the perspective of a (now grounded) pilot with no formal education. Reading a lot of "Private Pilot", "Plane and Pilot" or similar magazines might help because it will give you a user's-eye view of how things work. If you can afford it, even take a couple of introductory flight lessons. That's how I started: $5.00 and a coupon from the magazine got me my first half hour lesson.
Learning to fly involves a lot of the details of what keeps an iron bird in the air.

"Stick goes forward, houses get bigger. Stick goes back, houses get smaller."?
 
jhae2.718 said:
"Stick goes forward, houses get bigger. Stick goes back, houses get smaller."?

Well it's actually more of "stick controls speed; throttle controls altitude".
Unless back with the Sopwiths, when it was "pull the stick back to go up; pull it back some more to come down."
 
Danger said:
Well it's actually more of "stick controls speed; throttle controls altitude".
Unless back with the Sopwiths, when it was "pull the stick back to go up; pull it back some more to come down."

I've always wanted to know, what tastes better: Brontosaurus flank steak or Woolly Mammoth baby back ribs?
 
AIR&SPACE said:
I've always wanted to know, what tastes better: Brontosaurus flank steak or Woolly Mammoth baby back ribs?

The flank steak, for sure; tastes like chicken. On the other hand, the ribs come with built-in dental floss.