Physics in Engineering: Principles and Practice

The intersection of physics and engineering defines how structures stand, machines operate, circuits function, and energy is converted across every industrial sector in the United States. This page covers the foundational principles that physics contributes to engineering practice, the disciplinary boundaries where each field operates, and the professional standards that govern applied physics work. For researchers and industry professionals navigating the applied sciences landscape, the relationship between physics theory and engineering execution is not abstract — it is the operational backbone of infrastructure, defense, manufacturing, and biomedical technology.

Definition and scope

Engineering disciplines draw directly from physics to solve problems involving real materials, real forces, and real energy flows. The scope is broad: mechanical engineering applies classical mechanics and thermodynamics to design load-bearing systems and heat engines; electrical engineering is grounded in electromagnetism and semiconductor physics; civil engineering depends on fluid statics, soil mechanics, and structural dynamics; and aerospace engineering integrates all of the above with compressible flow and orbital mechanics.

Physics in engineering is not synonymous with applied physics as an academic subdiscipline. Applied physics, as defined by the American Physical Society (APS), focuses on research at the boundary between discovery and application — work that may not yet have a defined engineering context. Engineering physics programs, accredited through ABET (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology), train graduates to operate in that intermediate space: holding physics depth while meeting engineering licensing requirements. As of the 2023–2024 ABET accreditation cycle, engineering physics programs must satisfy general criteria under the Engineering Accreditation Commission (ABET Engineering Accreditation Commission).

The branches of physics most represented in engineering practice include classical mechanics, thermodynamics, electromagnetics, fluid mechanics, and solid-state physics. Quantum mechanics underpins semiconductor device design, laser engineering, and magnetic resonance imaging systems.

How it works

Physics principles enter engineering practice through three primary pathways:

  1. Mathematical modeling — Physical laws are formalized as equations (Newton's second law, Maxwell's equations, the first and second laws of thermodynamics) that engineers use to predict system behavior before fabrication. Finite element analysis software packages, such as those compliant with ASME verification and validation standards, implement these equations numerically across complex geometries.
  2. Material characterizationSolid-state and condensed matter physics produces the data — Young's modulus, thermal conductivity, electrical resistivity — that materials engineers specify in design. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) maintains reference databases for material properties through its Standard Reference Data program (NIST Standard Reference Data).
  3. Measurement and instrumentation — Engineering systems are validated against physical standards. The SI unit system, maintained internationally by the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) and domestically by NIST, governs all physical measurement in US engineering contracts (NIST Metric Program).

The distinction between a physics-based design model and an engineering specification is one of accountability. A physicist producing a model is operating under scientific norms; an engineer stamping a drawing is operating under professional liability enforced by state licensing boards under the National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) framework.

Fluid mechanics and dynamics, for instance, governs pipeline design, HVAC system sizing, and hydraulic machinery. The Navier-Stokes equations — derived from Newtonian mechanics — are the governing physics. But engineering practice requires that solutions also satisfy ASME B31.3 (Process Piping) and meet pressure ratings verified through physical testing, not derivation alone.

Common scenarios

Physics-to-engineering translation occurs across the following representative sectors:

Decision boundaries

The professional boundary between physicists and engineers in practice is defined by licensure, scope of work, and liability. Licensed Professional Engineers (PEs) hold state-issued credentials administered through NCEES; the PE exam is discipline-specific and does not require a physics degree. Physicists practicing in engineering roles without a PE license are restricted from signing and sealing engineering documents in most US states.

Contrast this with research and development contexts: a physicist working at a national laboratory such as Argonne National Laboratory or Oak Ridge National Laboratory may design experimental apparatus, model physical systems, and publish findings without PE licensure, because no public engineering deliverable is being certified.

The decision to apply classical versus quantum-scale models is itself a physics-in-engineering judgment. For structural steel, Newtonian mechanics is sufficient; for transistor gate lengths below 10 nanometers — a threshold now standard in commercial semiconductor fabrication — quantum tunneling effects require quantum mechanical treatment. Semiconductor physics and quantum field theory become engineering inputs at that scale. The broader conceptual framework governing how scientific models are selected and validated is examined in the how-science-works conceptual overview, which situates physics methods within scientific practice. A full cross-disciplinary index of physics topics relevant to engineering professionals is available through the Physics Authority subject index.

References

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