Courses Dynamics through physics or mechanical engineering?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the choice between studying dynamics through physics or mechanical engineering, highlighting key differences in focus and application. Physics courses, such as MIT's classical mechanics, emphasize understanding the fundamental principles and the "why" behind dynamics, while mechanical engineering courses concentrate on practical applications and the "what" of dynamics, often related to technology and engineering design. Participants express a preference for the physics approach due to its depth and beauty, but also question whether this knowledge is sufficient for practical applications like engine design. The consensus suggests that while physics provides a strong theoretical foundation, additional mechanical engineering courses may be necessary for practical engineering skills. The conversation also touches on the importance of structured learning and the value of understanding both theoretical and applied dynamics for comprehensive knowledge in the field.
fahraynk
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Which is better? To study dynamics through physics or through mechanical engineering? What is the difference really?

A book from MIT OCW classical mechanics 2 : Florian, Scheck. Mechanics: From Newton’s Laws to Deterministic Chaos. 3rd ed. https://www.amazon.com/dp/3540655581/?tag=pfamazon01-20

That book contains a lot of "dynamics" topics.
And the courses whose homework id be doing are these :
Classical mechanics 2 : http://dspace.mit.edu/bitstream/han...8-09Fall-2004/CourseHome/index.htm?sequence=1
Classical mechanics 3 : https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/physics/8-09-classical-mechanics-iii-fall-2014/index.htm

VS MIT OCW mechanical engineering, which has
Dynamics and control 1,2
Nonlinear Dynamics I: Chaos
Dynamics and Vibration (13.013J)
and a few others... A lot under graduate level.

If I take the physics branch will I need to go back and study these topics before I design something like an engine? I would much rather take the physics branch because I really like physics and this book looks cool... but I want to design/build model engines... so which is better?

PS: My prereq are intro to PDE, and I have learned to model physics in Comsol, I also know elec and magnetism and studied wave physics and an intro to aerodynamics
 
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Are you going for a physics degree, or a mechanical engineering degree?
 
Dr. Courtney said:
https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/physics/8-09-classical-mechanics-iii-fall-2014/index.htm

I took this course my first year of grad school. It was taught by Michel Baranger.

I never thought about dynamics the same way after that.

The Mech E version will teach you the WHAT.

The Physics version will teach you the WHY.

And the WHY is very, very beautiful.

Yeah, it will annoy me if I don't know why... but do you think I will know what they teach in the Mechanical Engineering version after taking the physics class or will I have to take both the mechanical engineering and physics dynamics classes to use it in practice?
 
jtbell said:
Are you going for a physics degree, or a mechanical engineering degree?
What if I want to do both, would I need to know the info from both, or would the physics class be enough so that I can use it in practice? (ignoring school requirements, I am talking knowledge wise only)
 
fahraynk said:
Yeah, it will annoy me if I don't know why... but do you think I will know what they teach in the Mechanical Engineering version after taking the physics class or will I have to take both the mechanical engineering and physics dynamics classes to use it in practice?

As an engineering student, I imagine the dymanics in mechanical engineering would also focus on technology, so youd probably be learning about...dynamics in some man made technology! feel free to correct me if I am wrong. :)
 
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fahraynk said:
Yeah, it will annoy me if I don't know why... but do you think I will know what they teach in the Mechanical Engineering version after taking the physics class or will I have to take both the mechanical engineering and physics dynamics classes to use it in practice?

I don't know about you. Once I got the WHY from the Physics Version (MIT 8.09), all the Mech E applications were obvious for me.

But I am an experimentalist with an engineering mind, it was my second version of a Physics dynamics course (the first at LSU three years earlier), and while I was taking the course, I was writing lots of dynamics modeling code for an unrelated research project. So I was all keyed in perfectly to see the WHAT with less of it being spelled out explicitly.

My mind moves from the theoretical to the practical much more easily than from the practical to the theoretical (once I really get the theoretical).
 
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Dr. Courtney said:
I don't know about you. Once I got the WHY from the Physics Version (MIT 8.09), all the Mech E applications were obvious for me.

But I am an experimentalist with an engineering mind, it was my second version of a Physics dynamics course (the first at LSU three years earlier), and while I was taking the course, I was writing lots of dynamics modeling code for an unrelated research project. So I was all keyed in perfectly to see the WHAT with less of it being spelled out explicitly.

My mind moves from the theoretical to the practical much more easily than from the practical to the theoretical (once I really get the theoretical).
Thanks kind of how I feel about studying the telegraph equation after taking 8.03... Its so obvious and an entire class for something so obvious I can just blow through it leisurely... Maybe you're leaning me in the physics direction. I thought it was an undergrad course though.
You said you took 8.09 or something similar on a grad level that was more detailed?
 
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fahraynk said:
Thanks kind of how I feel about studying the telegraph equation after taking 8.03... Its so obvious and an entire class for something so obvious I can just blow through it leisurely... Maybe you're leaning me in the physics direction. I thought it was an undergrad course though.
You said you took 8.09 or something similar on a grad level that was more detailed?

It was the same 8.09 that all the undergrads took. I may have been the only grad student in the course that semester.

Word on the street (among grad students) was that the PhD qualifying exams were tough in the mechanics section. All the advice I got was that the mechanics and dynamics courses I'd had at LSU would likely leave me short, so my choices were to self-study or to take the 8.09 course. I prefer the structure and accountability and feedback of a real course (homework sets, exams, etc.) Passed both the 1st and 2nd General Exams on the first try.

Professor Baranger ended up on my thesis committee so it ended up a great experience for me.
 
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Dr. Courtney said:
It was the same 8.09 that all the undergrads took. I may have been the only grad student in the course that semester.

Word on the street (among grad students) was that the PhD qualifying exams were tough in the mechanics section. All the advice I got was that the mechanics and dynamics courses I'd had at LSU would likely leave me short, so my choices were to self-study or to take the 8.09 course. I prefer the structure and accountability and feedback of a real course (homework sets, exams, etc.) Passed both the 1st and 2nd General Exams on the first try.

Professor Baranger ended up on my thesis committee so it ended up a great experience for me.
Cool. Thank you.
Wish they had answers to the problem sets on that 8.09 OCW though! -_-
 
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Bipolar Demon said:
As an engineering student, I imagine the dymanics in mechanical engineering would also focus on technology, so youd probably be learning about...dynamics in some man made technology! feel free to correct me if I am wrong. :)
But I think there is a difference / one has to distinguish between Dynamics (the standard theory in mechanics) and Applied Dynamics, which I think is what you mean. May be that will resolve the issue. (It depends on what one is looking for, e.g. the OP.)
 
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