Mechanical Engineering, BEA-CEL
Mechanical engineering, the branch of engineering concerned with the design, manufacture, installation, and operation of engines and machines and with manufacturing processes. It is particularly concerned with forces and motion.
Mechanical Engineering Encyclopedia Articles By Title
beacon, signalling object or device that indicates geographical location or direction to ships or aircraft by transmitting......
bearing, in machine construction, a connector (usually a support) that permits the connected members to rotate......
Beaufort scale, scale devised in 1805 by Commander (later Admiral and Knight Commander of the Bath) Francis Beaufort......
Édouard Belin was a French engineer who in 1907 made the first telephoto transmission, from Paris to Lyon to Bordeaux......
Lawrence Dale Bell was a U.S. aircraft designer whose experimental X-1 rocket-propelled airplane in 1947 was the......
belt drive, in machinery, a pair of pulleys attached to usually parallel shafts and connected by an encircling......
Vincent Bendix was an American inventor and industrialist who contributed to the development of automobiles and......
Karl Benz was a German mechanical engineer who designed and in 1885 built the world’s first practical automobile......
Ferdinand Berthoud was a horologist and author of extensive treatises on timekeeping. Berthoud was apprenticed......
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel was a German astronomer whose measurements of positions for about 50,000 stars and rigorous......
Jacques Besson was an engineer whose improvements in the lathe were of great importance in the development of the......
betatron, a type of particle accelerator that uses the electric field induced by a varying magnetic field to accelerate......
Bf 109, Nazi Germany’s most important fighter aircraft, both in operational importance and in numbers produced.......
Big Bertha, a type of 420-mm (16.5-inch) howitzer that was first used by the German army to bombard Belgian and......
binoculars, optical instrument, usually handheld, for providing a magnified stereoscopic view of distant objects.......
biological weapon, any of a number of disease-producing agents—such as bacteria, viruses, rickettsiae, fungi, toxins,......
biomass, the weight or total quantity of living organisms of one animal or plant species (species biomass) or of......
Vannoccio Biringuccio was an Italian metallurgist and armament maker, chiefly known as the author of De la pirotechnia......
bit, in communication and information theory, a unit of information equivalent to the result of a choice between......
Lyman Reed Blake was an American inventor who devised a sewing machine for sewing the soles of shoes to the uppers.......
Thomas Blanchard was an American inventor who made major contributions to the development of machine tools. Blanchard......
blowgun, tubular weapon from which projectiles are forcefully propelled by human breath. Primarily for hunting,......
blowpipe, a small tubular instrument for directing a jet of air or other gas into a flame in order to concentrate......
blunderbuss, short, muzzle-loading shoulder weapon, usually a flintlock, with a wide smooth bore flared at the......
Bode’s law, empirical rule giving the approximate distances of planets from the Sun. It was first announced in......
Johann Georg Bodmer was a Swiss mechanic and prolific inventor of machine tools and textile-making machinery. Information......
Bohr magneton, unit of magnetic moment used in the study of subatomic particles. It is defined asμB = eh 4πme ,......
bola, (Spanish: “balls”; from boleadoras), South American Indian weapon, primarily used for hunting, consisting......
bolometer, instrument for measuring radiation by means of the rise in temperature of a blackened metal strip in......
bolt action, type of breech mechanism that was the key to the development of the truly effective repeating rifle.......
bomb, a container carrying an explosive charge that is fused to detonate under certain conditions (as upon impact)......
Bombe, electromechanical code-breaking machine created by cryptologists in Britain during World War II to decode......
bomber, military aircraft designed to drop bombs on surface targets. Aerial bombardment can be traced to the Italo-Turkish......
boomerang, curved throwing stick used chiefly by the Aboriginals of Australia for hunting and warfare. Boomerangs......
Jean-Charles de Borda was a French mathematician and nautical astronomer noted for his studies of fluid mechanics......
bore, in weaponry, the interior of the barrel of a gun or firearm. In guns that have rifled barrels, e.g., rifles,......
boring machine, device for producing smooth and accurate holes in a workpiece by enlarging existing holes with......
Robert Bosch was a German engineer and industrialist who was responsible for the invention of the spark plug and......
Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose was an Indian plant physiologist and physicist whose invention of highly sensitive instruments......
Walther Bothe was a German physicist who shared the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1954 with Max Born for his invention......
Pierre Bouguer was a versatile French scientist best remembered as one of the founders of photometry, the measurement......
Matthew Boulton was an English manufacturer and engineer who financed and introduced James Watt’s steam engine.......
Marcel Boussac was a French industrialist and textile manufacturer whose introduction of colour into clothing ended......
bow and arrow, a weapon consisting of a stave made of wood or other elastic material, bent and held in tension......
Sir Charles Vernon Boys was an English physicist and inventor of sensitive instruments, known particularly for......
brace and bit, hand-operated tool for boring holes in wood, consisting of a crank-shaped turning device, the brace,......
Tycho Brahe was a Danish astronomer whose work in developing astronomical instruments and in measuring and fixing......
brake, device for decreasing the speed of a body or for stopping its motion. Most brakes act on rotating mechanical......
Joseph Bramah was an engineer and inventor whose lock-manufacturing shop was the cradle of the British machine-tool......
Alfred Brandt was a German civil engineer who was primarily responsible for the successful driving of the Simplon......
Wernher von Braun was a German engineer who played a prominent role in all aspects of rocketry and space exploration,......
breath analyzer, device used to determine the amount of alcohol in the system of persons suspected of being intoxicated......
Bren machine gun, British adaptation of a Czech light machine gun. Its name originated as an acronym from Brno,......
bridge, in electrical measurement, instrument for measuring electrical quantities. The first such instrument, invented......
British thermal unit (BTU), a measure of the quantity of heat, defined since 1956 as approximately equal to 1,055......
broaching machine, tool for finishing surfaces by drawing or pushing a cutter called a broach entirely over and......
Joseph Rogers Brown was an American inventor and manufacturer who made numerous advances in the field of fine measurement......
Browning automatic rifle (BAR), automatic rifle produced in the United States starting in 1918 and widely used......
Sir Marc Isambard Brunel was a French-émigré engineer and inventor who solved the historic problem of underwater......
bubble chamber, radiation detector that uses as the detecting medium a superheated liquid that boils into tiny......
building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPVs), photovoltaic cells and thin-film solar cells that are integral components......
bullet, an elongated metal projectile that is fired by a pistol, rifle, or machine gun. Bullets are measured by......
Robert Bunsen was a German chemist who, with Gustav Kirchhoff, about 1859 observed that each element emits a light......
William Seward Burroughs was an American inventor of the first recording adding machine and pioneer of its manufacture.......
bushel, unit of capacity in the British Imperial and the United States Customary systems of measurement. In the......
byte, the basic unit of information in computer storage and processing. A byte consists of 8 adjacent binary digits......
cable, in electrical and electronic systems, a conductor or group of conductors for transmitting electric power......
Calculating Clock, the earliest known calculator, built in 1623 by the German astronomer and mathematician Wilhelm......
calculator, machine for automatically performing arithmetical operations and certain mathematical functions. Modern......
calendar, any system for dividing time over extended periods, such as days, months, or years, and arranging such......
calender, machine that has wide application in the finishing of textile fabrics, the production of vinyl plastic......
calibre, in firearms, unit of measure indicating the interior, or bore, diameter of a gun barrel and the diameter......
caliper, measuring instrument that consists of two adjustable legs or jaws for measuring the dimensions of material......
H.L. Callendar was a British physicist who made notable contributions to thermometry, calorimetry, and knowledge......
calorie, a unit of energy or heat variously defined. The calorie was originally defined as the amount of heat required......
calorimeter, device for measuring the heat developed during a mechanical, electrical, or chemical reaction and......
cam, machine component that either rotates or moves back and forth (reciprocates) to create a prescribed motion......
Giuseppe Campani was an Italian optical-instrument maker who invented a lens-grinding lathe. Of peasant origin,......
Norman Robert Campbell was a British physicist and philosopher of science who is best known for his contributions......
camshaft, in internal-combustion engines, rotating shaft with attached disks of irregular shape (the cams), which......
candela (cd), unit of luminous intensity in the International System of Units (SI), defined as the luminous intensity......
cannon, big gun, howitzer, or mortar, as distinguished from a musket, rifle, or other small arm. Modern cannon......
capacitance, property of an electric conductor, or set of conductors, that is measured by the amount of separated......
capacitor, device for storing electrical energy, consisting of two conductors in close proximity and insulated......
carat, unit of weight for diamonds and certain other precious gems. Before 1913 the weight of a carat varied in......
carbine, light, short-barrelled musket or rifle. The word, the source of which is obscure, seems to have originated......
carburetor, device for supplying a spark-ignition engine with a mixture of fuel and air. Components of carburetors......
carding machine, Machine for carding textile fibres. In the 18th century, hand carding was laborious and constituted......
Carnot cycle, in heat engines, ideal cyclical sequence of changes of pressures and temperatures of a fluid, such......
cartridge, in weaponry, unit of small-arms ammunition, composed of a metal (usually brass) case, a propellant charge,......
Edmund Cartwright was an English inventor of the first wool-combing machine and of the predecessor of the modern......
casting, in the metal and plastics industry, the process whereby molten material is poured or forced into a mold......
catapult, mechanism for forcefully propelling stones, spears, or other projectiles, in use mainly as a military......
Caterpillar Inc., major American manufacturer of earth-moving, construction, agricultural, and materials-handling......
cathode, negative terminal or electrode through which electrons enter a direct current load, such as an electrolytic......
cathode-ray tube (CRT), Vacuum tube that produces images when its phosphorescent surface is struck by electron......
Sir George Cayley was an English pioneer of aerial navigation and aeronautical engineering and designer of the......
CCD, Semiconductor device in which the individual semiconductor components are connected so that the electrical......
ceilometer, device for measuring the height of cloud bases and overall cloud thickness. One important use of the......
Celsius, scale based on 0° for the freezing point of water and 100° for the boiling point of water. Invented in......