Paris, France

Electrical Engineering - Integration Circuits and Systems

Master's
Language: EnglishStudies in English
Subject area: engineering and engineering trades
Qualification: M2
Electrical Engineering
Electrical engineering is a professional engineering discipline that generally deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics, and electromagnetism. This field first became an identifiable occupation in the later half of the 19th century after commercialization of the electric telegraph, the telephone, and electric power distribution and use. Subsequently, broadcasting and recording media made electronics part of daily life. The invention of the transistor, and later the integrated circuit, brought down the cost of electronics to the point they can be used in almost any household object.
Engineering
Engineering is the creative application of science, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to the innovation, design, construction, operation and maintenance of structures, machines, materials, devices, systems, processes, and organizations. The discipline of engineering encompasses a broad range of more specialized fields of engineering, each with a more specific emphasis on particular areas of applied mathematics, applied science, and types of application. See glossary of engineering.
Integration
Integration may refer to:
Integration
This integrative action in virtue of which the nervous system unifies from separate organs an animal possessing solidarity, an individual, is the problem before us.
Sir Charles Scott Sherringto in:The Integrative Action of the Nervous System, CUP Archive, 1947, p. 2.
Integration
...to 'integrate the study of international economics with the study of international politics to deepen our comprehension of the forces at work in the world.
Robert Gilpin in Benno Teschke The Myth of 1648: Class, Geopolitics, and the Making of Modern International Relations, Verso, 2003.
Engineering
A man should build a house with his own hands before he calls himself an engineer.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1963), One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, p. 98
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