PrincetonUniversity

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The School of Engineering and Applied Science

Engineering at Princeton began in 1875 with the appointment of a professor and a course of study designed for civil engineering. A program in electrical engineering, the first in the United States, was founded in 1889. Three new areas of study in engineering, chemical, mechanical, and mining were added in 1921, and the School of Engineering and Applied Science was formally established. A professor of aeronautical engineering was appointed in 1942 and charged with the task of developing a curriculum of study in that discipline. Principal degrees offered by the school include the Bachelor of Science in Engineering (B.S.E.), Master of Science in Engineering (M.S.E.), Master of Engineering (M.Eng.), and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.).

The Engineering Quadrangle, built in 1962, houses four departments: chemical, civil engineering and operations research, electrical, and mechanical and aerospace engineering. Computer science occupies its own building (completed in 1989) and offers an A.B. as well as a B.S.E. degree. In 1993 the Princeton Materials Institute (PMI) moved into the newly completed Bowen Hall. An expansion of the Engineering Quadrangle was completed later that year, providing new space for the Center for Photonics and Optoelectronics Materials (POEM) and additional space for the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. The Engineering Library holds more than 200,000 volumes. In spring 1998 there were 774 engineering undergraduates, including 240 women and 343 enrolled graduate students. More than 100 faculty members serve the five departments.

Interdepartmental programs directed through the school include: energy and environment, architecture and engineering, engineering and management systems, engineering physics, engineering biology, geological engineering, robotics and intelligent systems, and statistics and operations research, among others.

Total engineering research expenditures for fiscal year 1997 were $29.2 million. Research initiatives include earthquake engineering, earth-observing systems, fiberoptic networks, materials science, photonics and optoelectronics, polymer science and technology, and theoretical computer science.
 

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