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[资源] MIT OpenCourseWare_Mechanical Engineering

Mechanical Engineering

Institutionally known as "Course 2," the MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering (ME) is the second oldest and second largest academic program at MIT. The editors of U.S. News & World Report, among others, consistently rank it the top graduate and undergraduate mechanical engineering program among North American colleges and universities. Its students are drawn from all 50 states and more than 50 countries. Its alumni are leaders in business and industry, education and government; they range from CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, to astronauts on the Space Shuttle, to award-winning scholars, inventors, entrepreneurs and innovators.
In 2005, Mechanical Engineering merged with the Department of Ocean Engineering (Course 13) to create a new department made up of approximately 75 faculty, 367 undergraduate students, 227 doctoral students, and 281 masters program students. Following the merger, the newly formed department retained its original name, the Department of Mechanical Engineering, which includes the Center for Ocean Engineering. As ME enters a new phase of its existence, it recognizes that its future lies in seven key "thrust areas" that will define its research and scholarly agenda. These areas have their foundations rooted in the Institute's 100-plus year history of research defined by the Scientific Method, their vibrant growth by the cross-pollination of interdisciplinary studies, and a potential yield of inventions and innovations only limited by the imagination and ingenuity of its faculty, researchers and students. They are:
Mechanics
Product Realization
Controls, Instrumentation & Robotics
Energy Science & Engineering
Ocean Science & Engineering
Bio-Mechanics & Engineering
Micro/Nano Mechanics & Engineering
More than two-dozen research laboratories and centers provide ME faculty, research scientists, post-doctoral associates and undergraduate and graduate students the opportunities to meet the challenges of the future by developing ground-breaking innovations today.

Undergraduate Courses
How and Why Machines Work, Spring 2002  
Mechanics & Materials I, Spring 2003  
Mechanics and Materials II, Spring 2004  
Modeling Dynamics and Control I, Spring 2005  
Dynamics and Vibration (13.013J), Fall 2002  
Modeling Dynamics and Control II, Spring 2003  
Design and Manufacturing I, Spring 2005  
Design and Manufacturing II, Spring 2003  
Design and Manufacturing II, Spring 2004  
Introduction to Ocean Science and Engineering, Spring 2006  
Hydrodynamics (13.012), Fall 2005  
Design of Systems Operating in Random Environments, Spring 2006  
Design of Ocean Systems, Fall 2005  
Introduction to Modeling and Simulation, Spring 2006  
Information and Entropy, Spring 2003  
Introduction to Robotics, Fall 2005  
Intermediate Heat and Mass Transfer, Fall 2001  
Fundamentals of Energy in Buildings, Fall 2003  
Mechanical Engineering Tools, January (IAP) 2004  
Projects Laboratory, Spring 2004  
Elements of Mechanical Design, Spring 2006  
Mechatronics, Spring 1999  
Statistical Thermodynamics of Biomolecular Systems (BE.011J), Spring 2004  
Thermodynamics of Biomolecular Systems, Fall 2005  
Introduction to Bioengineering (BE.010J), Spring 2006  
Quantitative Physiology: Cells and Tissues, Fall 2004  
Quantitative Physiology: Organ Transport Systems, Spring 2004  
Quantitative Physiology: Cells and Tissues, Fall 2004  
Management in Engineering, Fall 2004  
2nd Summer Introduction to Design, January (IAP) 2003  
Designing Paths to Peace, Fall 2002  
Introduction to Numerical Analysis for Engineering (13.002J), Spring 2005  
Designing Paths to Peace, Fall 2002  

Graduate Courses
Dynamics, Fall 2004  
Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos, Fall 2004  
Wave Propagation, Fall 2004  
Advanced Structural Dynamics and Acoustics (13.811), Spring 2004  
Computational Ocean Acoustics (13.853), Spring 2003  
Structural Mechanics (13.10J), Fall 2002  
Plates and Shells, Spring 2006  
Ship Structural Analysis & Design (13.122), Spring 2003  
Structural Mechanics in Nuclear Power Technology, Spring 2004  
Computer Methods in Dynamics, Fall 2002  
Finite Element Analysis of Solids and Fluids, Spring 2002  
Introduction to Numerical Simulation (SMA 5211), Fall 2003  
Numerical Methods for Partial Differential Equations (SMA 5212), Spring 2003  
Optimization Methods (SMA 5213), Fall 2004  
Quantum Computation, Fall 2003  
Modeling and Simulation of Dynamic Systems, Fall 2002  
Maneuvering and Control of Surface and Underwater Vehicles (13.49), Fall 2004  
Dynamics of Nonlinear Systems, Fall 2003  
Computational Geometry, Spring 2003  
Foundations of Software Engineering, Fall 2000  
Identification, Estimation, and Learning, Spring 2006  
Marine Hydrodynamics (13.021), Spring 2005  
Design Principles for Ocean Vehicles (13.42), Spring 2005  
Hydrofoils and Propellers (13.04), Fall 2003  
Ocean Wave Interaction with Ships and Offshore Energy Systems (13.022), Spring 2002  
Advanced Fluid Mechanics, Fall 2005  
Compressible Fluid Dynamics, Spring 2004  
Turbulent Flow and Transport, Spring 2002  
Numerical Marine Hydrodynamics (13.024), Spring 2003  
Submicrometer and Nanometer Technology, Spring 2006 NEW  
Nano-to-Macro Transport Processes, Fall 2004  
Radiative Transfer, Spring 2006  
Fundamentals of Advanced Energy Conversion, Spring 2004  
Internal Combustion Engines, Spring 2004  
Fundamentals of Advanced Energy Conversion, Spring 2004  
Superconducting Magnets, Spring 2003  
Sustainable Energy, Spring 2005  
Principles of Oceanographic Instrument Systems -- Sensors and Measurements (13.998), Spring 2004 NEW  
Introduction to Naval Architecture (13.400), Fall 2004  
Optical Engineering, Spring 2002  
Product Design and Development, Spring 2006  
Precision Machine Design, Fall 2001  
Multi-Scale System Design, Fall 2004  
Multi-Scale System Design, Fall 2004  
Noninvasive Imaging in Biology and Medicine, Fall 2005  
Biomedical Information Technology (BE.453J), Spring 2005  
Design of Medical Devices and Implants, Spring 2003  
Cell-Matrix Mechanics, Spring 2004  
Fields, Forces, and Flows in Biological Systems (BE.430J), Fall 2004  
Molecular, Cellular and Tissue Biomechanics (BE.410J), Spring 2003  
Biomaterials-Tissue Interactions (BE.441), Fall 2003  
Tribology, Fall 2004  
Control of Manufacturing Processes (SMA 6303), Spring 2004  
System Optimization and Analysis for Manufacturing, Summer 2003  
Manufacturing Systems Analysis, Spring 2004  
Manufacturing Systems I (SMA 6304), Fall 2004  
Mechanical Assembly and Its Role in Product Development, Fall 2004  
System Design and Analysis based on AD and Complexity Theories, Spring 2005  
Proseminar in Manufacturing, Fall 2005  
Sailing Yacht Design (13.734), Fall 2003  
Decision Making in Large Scale Systems, Spring 2004

http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Mechanical-Engineering/index.htm
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