<p>Which engineering major is the least physics heavy? All of them probably....</p>
<p>least? computer science</p>
<p>Besides computer science/computer engineering, agricultural, and biological... LOL</p>
<p>Which one is the least physics heavy out of mechanical, aerospace, electrical, industrial?</p>
<p>Industrial.</p>
<p>definitely industrial...after looking at my school's IE curriculum the only required physics classes are phys 1 and 2 with calc and mechanics/statics...thermodynamics is optional</p>
<p>thermodynamics is more chem than physics. i'd agree IE and CE would require least physics. ME, AE, on the other hand, require the most.</p>
<p>EE is up there, too.</p>
<p>"Besides computer science/computer engineering, agricultural, and biological"</p>
<p>well sorry to disappoint you again, but computer engineering and biological engineering are chock full of physics. I don't know anything about agricultural. But why don't you want to take physics though? If you don't enjoy physics it probably means that you don't enjoy the application of math in describing physical phenomenon -- in that case I'd avoid engineering in general.</p>
<p>yes, computer engineering is very physics intensive. as well as disciplines of civil engineering. </p>
<p>Besides for CS, Industrial doesn't apply as much physics. However, regardless your discipline of engineering, you will need to take the same physics classes as computer engineers, mechanical engineers, etc etc. The same curriculum is taught to all engineering students for the first two years of college.</p>
<p>In my school the EE/CS/Comp E have to take Phys 1,2, thermal and quantum.</p>
<p>the ME, NucE, IE, Civ E, Agr E, Petro E need Phys 1,2, quantum......they take intro to thermo instead of thermal physics
(the thermo class is offfered by the ME Dept)</p>
<p>For Chem E, they have they're own Thermo</p>