Other Definitions
engine (dict)

Engine

An engine is something that produces some effect from a given input. The origin of engineering was the working of engines. There is an overlap in English between two meanings of the word "engineer": 'those who operate engines' and 'those who design and construct new items'. In original usage, an engine was any sort of mechanical device. The term "gin" in cotton gin is a short form of this usage. Practically every device from the industrial revolution was referred to as an engine, and this is where the steam engine gained its name. This form of the term has recently come into use once again in computer science, where terms like search engine, "3-D graphics rendering engine" and "text-to-speech engine" are common. The earliest mechanical computing device was called the difference engine. In more recent usage, the term is typically used to describe devices that perform mechanical work, follow-ons to the original steam engine. In most cases the work is supplied by exerting a torque, which is used to operate other machinery, generate electricity, pump water or compress gas. In the context of propulsion systems, an air breathing engine is one that uses atmospheric air to oxidise the fuel carried, rather than carrying an oxidiser, as in a rocket. Theoretically, this should result in a better specific impulse than for rocket engines. Air-breathing engines include:

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
ellipsis
enola gay
electronvolt
electrochemistry
edinburgh
ernest rutherford, 1st baron rutherford of nelson
many worlds interpretation
ergonomics
electronic commerce
euler's formula
eductor jet pump
douard manet
evolutionarily stable strategy
element
extremophile
education reform
ellensburg, washington
eugene, oregon
elizabeth barrett browning
enlil
ecology
english country dance
ecosystem
e (mathematical constant)
euler maclaurin formula
epimenides paradox
economic and monetary union
european environment agency
ev
erlang programming language
euphoria programming language
energy
expected value
edison
electric light
edgar rice burroughs
eugne viollet le duc
endocarditis
euler's conjecture
exodus
electronics
erewhon
ectopia
ec