Engineering Resume Buzz Words

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Engineering Resume Buzz Words Engineering Resume Buzz Words 3D Modeling Detailed Models Acoustic Modeling Development Environment Aerodynamics Digital Electronics Allocation Documentation Analog Electronics Dynamic Systems Architecture Enhancements Economical Solution Assembly Design Efficiency Control Assembly Modification Electrical Analysis Bid and Cost Plus Work Electrical Design Bid Sheets Electrical Engineering Bidder Lists Electronic Design Board of Safety Standards Electronic Equipment Buildings Electrostatic Discharge C Programming Emissions Testing C4 Navigation and intelligence Engineering Estimates Cable Products Engineering Field Supervision Capital Equipment Engineering Management Ceramic Capacitors Environmental Engineering Chemical Engineering Environmental Problems Chemistry Environmental Regulations Circuitry Environmental Testing Civil Engineering Equipment Maintenance Commercial Projects Exploration of Mines Competitive Analysis Fabrication Methodologies Complex Electromechanical Systems Facilities Component Evaluation Facilities Engineering Components and Assemblies Facilities Inspections Compression tests Flow Patterns Computer Product Design Fluid Compression Computer Programming Fluid Mechanics Computer Software Packages Fluid Systems Computer-based Transducers and Functional Flows Loudspeaker System measurement Functionality Conceptualization Geological Formation Conflicts Resolution Global Marketing Consistency and Compatibility Government Markets Construction Coordination Hardware Evaluation Construction Estimates High-Density Surface Mount Construction Industries Printed Circuit/Wiring Board Contract Engineering High-Speed Applications Cost Reduction High Temperature Environments Creep Tests Highways Customized Security Hydraulic Systems Data Collection and Analysis Hydrologic Surveys Data Performance Characteristics Industrial Engineering Design and Construction of RF Industrial Projects Equipment Information-Based Systems Design Methodologies Injection Molding Design Design Verification Testing Inorganic Chemistry Engineering Resume Buzz Words Integrated Solutions and Services Problem-Solving Skills Integrated Systems Procedures Inter-Disciplinary Requirements Process and Procedure Development Internal Controls Process and Projects Documentation Justification Studies Process Control Land Surveying Services Process Development Line Balancing Process Improvements Load Monitors Process Methods Logical Performance Characteristics Process Sheets Logistics Product Development Machinery Productivity Machinery Maintenance Professional Consulting Maintenance Documentation Programmable Logic Management Process Project Cost Manufacturing Project Engineering Manufacturing Problem Resolution Project Management Manufacturing Process Project Specification Marine Engineering Project Start-Up Master Specifications Prototypes Mathematical Models pWB Fabrication Mathematics Qualitative Analysis Mechanical and Control Systems Quality Assurance Mechanical Design Quality Assurance Tests Mechanical Design Integrity Quality Control Mechanical Engineering Quantitative Analysis Mechanism Design Radiation Monitoring Equipment Microscopic Analysis Radiological Controls Mission-Critical Programs Reactor Design Motion Control Reactor Maintenance Mounting Reconnaissance Networked Systems Regulatory Compliance Networking Functionality Regulatory Requirements New Product Development Environment Reliability OEm Reliability and Quality Assurance Operations Manual Reliability Life Testing Part Tolerance Research and Development Parts Modeling Safety Regulations Performance Characteristics Scheduling Petroleum Accumulation Science Petroleum Generation Scientific Discovery Petroleum Migration Sheet Metal Design Phase Separation Space Platforms Physical Performance Characteristics Space Systems and Electronics Planning Polishing Specifications Powder and Bulk Solids Handling Statistical Analysis Power Supply Test Statistical Process Controls Preproduction Engineering Prototypes Stress Analysis Preventative Maintenance Programs Structural Design Principles Subsystems Engineering Resume Buzz Words Surveillance Observed Susceptibility Testing Operated System Analysis Oversaw System Baselines Participated System Characterization and Test Performed Planned System Dynamics Prepared System Maintenance Provided Technical Files Represented Technical Guidelines Researched Technical Guides Reviewed Technical Support Revised Technical Writing Scheduled Tensile Tests Served Test Planning and Field Operations Supervised Test Plans Supported Test Processes Trained Test specimens Utilized Testability and Verifiability of Worked Requirements Wrote Testing Policies Testing Standards Theories Thermodynamics Thermoforming Design Timing Violations Tooling Top-Level System Architecture Vendor and Partner Technology Relationships Weight Distribution Properties Worst –Case Scenarios Written Specifications Verbs Analyzed Applied Assembled Assisted Conducted Designed Developed Directed Engineered Established Evaluated Initiated Inspected Manufactured Modified Monitored .
Recommended publications
  • Mechatronics Education at the Johannes Kepler University: Engineering Education in Its Totality*
    Int. J. Engng Ed. Vol. 19, No. 4, pp. 532±536, 2003 0949-149X/91 $3.00+0.00 Printed in Great Britain. # 2003 TEMPUS Publications. Mechatronics Education at the Johannes Kepler University: Engineering Education in its Totality* RUDOLF SCHEIDL, HARTMUT BREMER and KURT SCHLACHER Johannes Kepler University Linz, Altenbergerstrasse 69, A-4040 Linz, Austria. E-mail: [email protected] A fully academic mechatronics engineering course was established at Linz University in 1990 in response to the expressed needs of industry for this new type of engineer. Mechatronics is taught here in a balanced way, emphasizing mechanical and electrical engineering as well as computer sciences, equally. More than six years working experience of graduates in industry confirm the validity of this concept. A study with such a broad scope combined with a sound scientific depth can only be achieved by an articulated well-balanced curriculum. INTRODUCTION . Basic sciences (such as mathematics, the relevant disciplines in physics), nowadays computer THE SPECIFIC CONCEPT of mechatronics sciences, technical knowledge and even some education at the Johannes Kepler University in practical skills (manufacturing or technical Linz is the result of the leading industrial position drawing) have to be attributed appropriate of the province of Upper Austria, its strong shares. Discussions about the appropriate orientation towards mechanical engineering (as share of the different categories of knowledge shown in Fig. 1), and its tradition in higher already date back to the origin of higher engin- education. The explicit request of industry for eering education at Universities in Europe in the academic engineering courses in mechanical and 19th century.
    [Show full text]
  • Engineering Management and Cost Control of Petrochemical Projects
    493 A publication of CHEMICAL ENGINEERING TRANSACTIONS VOL. 71, 2018 The Italian Association of Chemical Engineering Online at www.aidic.it/cet Guest Editors: Xiantang Zhang, Songrong Qian, Jianmin Xu Copyright © 2018, AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. ISBN 978-88-95608-68-6; ISSN 2283-9216 DOI: 10.3303/CET1871083 Engineering Management and Cost Control of Petrochemical Projects Jingjing Song, Zhiwei Helian* School of Economics and Management, Yanshan University, Qinhuangdao 066004, China [email protected] With the increasing developing of petrochemical engineering construction market, China has accumulated rich experience in project engineering management and cost control, but has not yet established a complete cost control performance evaluation system, and the traditional project cost control method has been unable to meet the cost requirements under the new project management environment. For this, this paper studies the engineering management and cost control system theory of petrochemical projects, and builds one petrochemical project cost control system. The analysis results show that mature project management mode has been increasingly applied in petrochemical projects. The construction of the engineering cost control early warning system can achieve the objective of cost control. The related cost control performance evaluation system can greatly improve the actual engineering cost control level and realize the quantification and standardization of cost control performance evaluation. 1. Introduction Petrochemical projects involve various fields in the country such as import and export, labour, capital, and economic politics (Liu et al., 2018; Bovsunovskaya, 2016). In terms of project management, due to different climatic conditions, technical standards and backgrounds of different countries, the management of engineering projects is faced with great challenges (Willems and Vanhoucke, 2015).
    [Show full text]
  • Lecture 1: Introduction
    Lecture 1: Introduction E. J. Hinch Non-Newtonian fluids occur commonly in our world. These fluids, such as toothpaste, saliva, oils, mud and lava, exhibit a number of behaviors that are different from Newtonian fluids and have a number of additional material properties. In general, these differences arise because the fluid has a microstructure that influences the flow. In section 2, we will present a collection of some of the interesting phenomena arising from flow nonlinearities, the inhibition of stretching, elastic effects and normal stresses. In section 3 we will discuss a variety of devices for measuring material properties, a process known as rheometry. 1 Fluid Mechanical Preliminaries The equations of motion for an incompressible fluid of unit density are (for details and derivation see any text on fluid mechanics, e.g. [1]) @u + (u · r) u = r · S + F (1) @t r · u = 0 (2) where u is the velocity, S is the total stress tensor and F are the body forces. It is customary to divide the total stress into an isotropic part and a deviatoric part as in S = −pI + σ (3) where tr σ = 0. These equations are closed only if we can relate the deviatoric stress to the velocity field (the pressure field satisfies the incompressibility condition). It is common to look for local models where the stress depends only on the local gradients of the flow: σ = σ (E) where E is the rate of strain tensor 1 E = ru + ruT ; (4) 2 the symmetric part of the the velocity gradient tensor. The trace-free requirement on σ and the physical requirement of symmetry σ = σT means that there are only 5 independent components of the deviatoric stress: 3 shear stresses (the off-diagonal elements) and 2 normal stress differences (the diagonal elements constrained to sum to 0).
    [Show full text]
  • Multidisciplinary Design Project Engineering Dictionary Version 0.0.2
    Multidisciplinary Design Project Engineering Dictionary Version 0.0.2 February 15, 2006 . DRAFT Cambridge-MIT Institute Multidisciplinary Design Project This Dictionary/Glossary of Engineering terms has been compiled to compliment the work developed as part of the Multi-disciplinary Design Project (MDP), which is a programme to develop teaching material and kits to aid the running of mechtronics projects in Universities and Schools. The project is being carried out with support from the Cambridge-MIT Institute undergraduate teaching programe. For more information about the project please visit the MDP website at http://www-mdp.eng.cam.ac.uk or contact Dr. Peter Long Prof. Alex Slocum Cambridge University Engineering Department Massachusetts Institute of Technology Trumpington Street, 77 Massachusetts Ave. Cambridge. Cambridge MA 02139-4307 CB2 1PZ. USA e-mail: [email protected] e-mail: [email protected] tel: +44 (0) 1223 332779 tel: +1 617 253 0012 For information about the CMI initiative please see Cambridge-MIT Institute website :- http://www.cambridge-mit.org CMI CMI, University of Cambridge Massachusetts Institute of Technology 10 Miller’s Yard, 77 Massachusetts Ave. Mill Lane, Cambridge MA 02139-4307 Cambridge. CB2 1RQ. USA tel: +44 (0) 1223 327207 tel. +1 617 253 7732 fax: +44 (0) 1223 765891 fax. +1 617 258 8539 . DRAFT 2 CMI-MDP Programme 1 Introduction This dictionary/glossary has not been developed as a definative work but as a useful reference book for engi- neering students to search when looking for the meaning of a word/phrase. It has been compiled from a number of existing glossaries together with a number of local additions.
    [Show full text]
  • Abate T. Wolde-Kirkos, Ph.D., P.E. 17403 S
    Abate T. Wolde-Kirkos, Ph.D., P.E. 17403 S. Sienna Cove LN, Houston, Texas 77083 ♦ [email protected] ♦ cell: 832-731-7298 OBJECTIVE Seeking a position to contribute and add value to the department’s programs in a consistently professional manner. SUMMARY OF QUALIFICATIONS I am a professional engineer based in the State of Texas and have more than 20 years of engineering consulting experience in the general area of civil engineering and research, both in the United States and international settings. My technical qualifications include: civil engineering design and supervision; specifications; cost estimating; engineering reports; construction engineering; program and project management; contract administration; permit acquisition. Positions held during this period include program manager, project manager, project engineer, Research Assistant (water resources) and Water Resources Consultant and Project Controls Manager in the design and preparation of plans and specifications, schematic design, preliminary design and estimates for roadways, storm sewer, drainage, water distribution, wastewater collection, etc. As a water resources development consultant, I provided professional services for water resources projects sponsored by UNICEF and other international agencies in various eco-systems (mountain, desert, urban areas) in the Indian sub-continent through international non-government organization. I have several years of college/university-level teaching experience, including as Adjunct Faculty in Construction Engineering at the University of Houston. Technical publications include the following: 1. Seepage from Canal to Asymmetric Drainages, Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, ASCE, Vol. 120, No. 5, September/October 1994, pp. 949-956. 2. Ph.D. Thesis, 1993: “Seepage from Canal With Asymmetric Drainages” (analytical solution using Conformal Mapping – includes shape of canal).
    [Show full text]
  • Managing Design and Construction Using Systems Engineering for Use with DOE O 413.3A
    NOT MEASUREMENT SENSITIVE DOE G 413.3-1 9-23-08 Managing Design and Construction Using Systems Engineering for Use with DOE O 413.3A [This Guide describes suggested nonmandatory approaches for meeting requirements. Guides are not requirements documents and are not construed as requirements in any audit or appraisal for compliance with the parent Policy, Order, Notice, or Manual.] U.S. Department of Energy Washington, D.C. 20585 AVAILABLE ONLINE AT: INITIATED BY: www.directives.doe.gov National Nuclear Security Administration DOE G 413.3-1 i 9-23-08 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Goal .................................................................................................................................. 1 1.2. Applicability. .................................................................................................................... 2 1.3. What is Systems Engineering? ......................................................................................... 2 1.4. Links with Other Directives ............................................................................................. 2 1.5. Overlapping Systems Engineering and Safety Principles and Practices .......................... 4 1.6. Differences in Terminology ............................................................................................. 5 1.7. How this Guide is Structured ..........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Navier-Stokes-Equation
    Math 613 * Fall 2018 * Victor Matveev Derivation of the Navier-Stokes Equation 1. Relationship between force (stress), stress tensor, and strain: Consider any sub-volume inside the fluid, with variable unit normal n to the surface of this sub-volume. Definition: Force per area at each point along the surface of this sub-volume is called the stress vector T. When fluid is not in motion, T is pointing parallel to the outward normal n, and its magnitude equals pressure p: T = p n. However, if there is shear flow, the two are not parallel to each other, so we need a marix (a tensor), called the stress-tensor , to express the force direction relative to the normal direction, defined as follows: T Tn or Tnkjjk As we will see below, σ is a symmetric matrix, so we can also write Tn or Tnkkjj The difference in directions of T and n is due to the non-diagonal “deviatoric” part of the stress tensor, jk, which makes the force deviate from the normal: jkp jk jk where p is the usual (scalar) pressure From general considerations, it is clear that the only source of such “skew” / ”deviatoric” force in fluid is the shear component of the flow, described by the shear (non-diagonal) part of the “strain rate” tensor e kj: 2 1 jk2ee jk mm jk where euujk j k k j (strain rate tensro) 3 2 Note: the funny construct 2/3 guarantees that the part of proportional to has a zero trace. The two terms above represent the most general (and the only possible) mathematical expression that depends on first-order velocity derivatives and is invariant under coordinate transformations like rotations.
    [Show full text]
  • Leonhard Euler Moriam Yarrow
    Leonhard Euler Moriam Yarrow Euler's Life Leonhard Euler was one of the greatest mathematician and phsysicist of all time for his many contributions to mathematics. His works have inspired and are the foundation for modern mathe- matics. Euler was born in Basel, Switzerland on April 15, 1707 AD by Paul Euler and Marguerite Brucker. He is the oldest of five children. Once, Euler was born his family moved from Basel to Riehen, where most of his childhood took place. From a very young age Euler had a niche for math because his father taught him the subject. At the age of thirteen he was sent to live with his grandmother, where he attended the University of Basel to receive his Master of Philosphy in 1723. While he attended the Universirty of Basel, he studied greek in hebrew to satisfy his father. His father wanted to prepare him for a career in the field of theology in order to become a pastor, but his friend Johann Bernouilli convinced Euler's father to allow his son to pursue a career in mathematics. Bernoulli saw the potentional in Euler after giving him lessons. Euler received a position at the Academy at Saint Petersburg as a professor from his friend, Daniel Bernoulli. He rose through the ranks very quickly. Once Daniel Bernoulli decided to leave his position as the director of the mathmatical department, Euler was promoted. While in Russia, Euler was greeted/ introduced to Christian Goldbach, who sparked Euler's interest in number theory. Euler was a man of many talents because in Russia he was learning russian, executed studies on navigation and ship design, cartography, and an examiner for the military cadet corps.
    [Show full text]
  • Euler and Chebyshev: from the Sphere to the Plane and Backwards Athanase Papadopoulos
    Euler and Chebyshev: From the sphere to the plane and backwards Athanase Papadopoulos To cite this version: Athanase Papadopoulos. Euler and Chebyshev: From the sphere to the plane and backwards. 2016. hal-01352229 HAL Id: hal-01352229 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01352229 Preprint submitted on 6 Aug 2016 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. EULER AND CHEBYSHEV: FROM THE SPHERE TO THE PLANE AND BACKWARDS ATHANASE PAPADOPOULOS Abstract. We report on the works of Euler and Chebyshev on the drawing of geographical maps. We point out relations with questions about the fitting of garments that were studied by Chebyshev. This paper will appear in the Proceedings in Cybernetics, a volume dedicated to the 70th anniversary of Academician Vladimir Betelin. Keywords: Chebyshev, Euler, surfaces, conformal mappings, cartography, fitting of garments, linkages. AMS classification: 30C20, 91D20, 01A55, 01A50, 53-03, 53-02, 53A05, 53C42, 53A25. 1. Introduction Euler and Chebyshev were both interested in almost all problems in pure and applied mathematics and in engineering, including the conception of industrial ma- chines and technological devices. In this paper, we report on the problem of drawing geographical maps on which they both worked.
    [Show full text]
  • Geotechnical Engineering Report Country Ridge Subdivision Strawberry Lane Richland, Washington
    Geotechnical Engineering Report Country Ridge Subdivision Strawberry Lane Richland, Washington Prepared for: Pahlisch Homes, Inc. 210 SW Wilson Avenue, Suite 100 Bend, Oregon 97702 November 17, 2020 PBS Project 66265.000 4412 S CORBETT AVENUE PORTLAND, OR 97239 503.248.1939 MAIN 866.727.0140 FAX PBSUSA.COM Geotechnical Engineering Report Country Ridge Subdivision Strawberry Lane Richland, Washington Prepared for: Pahlisch Homes, Inc. 210 SW Wilson Avenue, Suite 100 Bend, Oregon 97702 November 17, 2020 PBS Project 66265.000 Prepared by: 11/17/2020 11/17/2020 Clint Nealey, PE Shaun Cordes, LG, LEG Geotechnical Staff Engineer Project Engineering geologist Reviewed by: Ryan White, PE, GE (OR) Principal/Geotechnical Engineering Group Manager © 2020 PBS Engineering and Environmental Inc. 4412 S CORBETT AVENUE, PORTLAND, OR 97239 . 503.248.1939 MAIN . 866.727.0140 FAX . PBSUSA.COM Geotechnical Engineering Report Country Ridge Subdivision Pahlisch Homes, Inc. Richland, Washington Table of Contents 1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 General ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Purpose and Scope ................................................................................................................................................................... 1 1.2.1 Literature
    [Show full text]
  • Project Management Applied to Student Design Projects
    Session 2642 Project Management Applied to Student Design Projects Andrew N. Vavreck Penn State University, Altoona College Abstract Student design projects are very useful for practically bringing student knowledge areas to bear, for giving students open ended, creative experiences, in developing team skills and for enhancing communication abilities. Management of these projects through sound project management principles can help expand the range of experiences, as well as simply help keep projects on track. Project management is performed to some extent on many projects in many schools, as a survey in this paper of publications indicates, with mixed results being experienced. The paper then focuses on an extensive application of project management techniques to capstone design courses involving engineering technology students and to other student design projects (e.g. SAE Mini Baja) at Penn State Altoona, through involvement by business school faculty and students. Future plans, lessons learned and student perceptions are discussed and recommendations made. Introduction The importance of group design projects to today’s engineering and engineering technology programs is indisputable,1 and multidisciplinary teams on such projects are of growing significance, to give students exposure to other ways of addressing problems and to other fields’ content.2 Project management techniques can help enable multidisciplinary group projects, in an organized way, to enhance the learning experience for students3 Consequently, many faculty have decided to incorporate project management or multidisciplinary teams to augment design in their engineering or engineering technology programs. Project Management Courses It has been found4 that project managers need to have the following skills, in decreasing order of importance: communications, organization, team building, leadership, coping and technological expertise.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Geometric Character of Stress in Continuum Mechanics
    Z. angew. Math. Phys. 58 (2007) 1–14 0044-2275/07/050001-14 DOI 10.1007/s00033-007-6141-8 Zeitschrift f¨ur angewandte c 2007 Birkh¨auser Verlag, Basel Mathematik und Physik ZAMP On the geometric character of stress in continuum mechanics Eva Kanso, Marino Arroyo, Yiying Tong, Arash Yavari, Jerrold E. Marsden1 and Mathieu Desbrun Abstract. This paper shows that the stress field in the classical theory of continuum mechanics may be taken to be a covector-valued differential two-form. The balance laws and other funda- mental laws of continuum mechanics may be neatly rewritten in terms of this geometric stress. A geometrically attractive and covariant derivation of the balance laws from the principle of energy balance in terms of this stress is presented. Mathematics Subject Classification (2000). Keywords. Continuum mechanics, elasticity, stress tensor, differential forms. 1. Motivation This paper proposes a reformulation of classical continuum mechanics in terms of bundle-valued exterior forms. Our motivation is to provide a geometric description of force in continuum mechanics, which leads to an elegant geometric theory and, at the same time, may enable the development of space-time integration algorithms that respect the underlying geometric structure at the discrete level. In classical mechanics the traditional approach is to define all the kinematic and kinetic quantities using vector and tensor fields. For example, velocity and traction are both viewed as vector fields and power is defined as their inner product, which is induced from an appropriately defined Riemannian metric. On the other hand, it has long been appreciated in geometric mechanics that force should not be viewed as a vector, but rather a one-form.
    [Show full text]