Studying electrical engineering?

In electrical engineering studies, do you also learn things like why a coil has a higher resistance at higher frequencies or is that a foundation on which you build?

I'm wavering between physics and ET, although unfortunately everything points in favor of ET….

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evtldocha
2 years ago

where unfortunately everything actually speaks for ET….

Why? unfortunately?

If you prefer to study physics, then do this if electrical engineering, then study electrical engineering. I can only say one out of my feeling: if something starts with “satisfied”, it doesn’t sound like you want to deal with matter for a few years.

iSolveProblems
2 years ago
Reply to  evtldocha

Why, unfortunately, well, because electrical technicians don’t do mathematics properly. To heuristic people

VINC767
2 years ago
Reply to  iSolveProblems

.

π = 3 = e

g = 10

evtldocha
2 years ago
Reply to  iSolveProblems

Something similar I heard to mathematicians about physicists – but has nothing to do with what I wanted to say.

VINC767
2 years ago

Electrical and information technology Yeah, I know. We also looked at it as it stood 😄.

It was also just a task, and that one should only be roughly beaten in the head. There was less about the result and more about the principle

iSolveProblems
2 years ago

I don’t know what degree you’re coming from, but even if you’re an electrical engineer, pi = 5 is so wrong, so that hurts right

VINC767
2 years ago

With us was also π = 5. Hahaha.

iSolveProblems
2 years ago

You engineer!

iSolveProblems
2 years ago

No, but maybe that’s what he thinks about.

YBCO123
2 years ago

Yes, I’m sure you learn this in your studies: it won’t (it wouldn’t bring anything…), but you have to realize that the pace is much higher than at school.

YBCO123
2 years ago
Reply to  Anonymmaster

So all my former physics colleagues found a well-paid job. No one has ever become unemployed. I wouldn’t worry about it: physicists are coveted workers, and even if the Nobel Prize is not enough, the economy is always well paid.

YBCO123
2 years ago

What do you mean, “better”? And should it be, then it is up to the personality and not to study. Not a few physicists, like electrical technicians, have brought it to the top of world corporations. So “no perspective…” is bullshit.

I think you’re overestimated: what you do depends only on your own skill – what you’ve learned in it is almost side by side.

Maxi170703
2 years ago

This is what you learn in the ET

Akka2323
2 years ago

Do you know? Why knows?