Metallurgy in a sentence as a noun

Some metallurgy guru could chime in and explain why that is.

I'd bet that there's still stuff to be learned, especially in metallurgy.

My committee was made up of members who were all 60+ years in age and had been the founding fathers of metallurgy.

My closest brush with metallurgy was in a high-school chemistry text-book, which to be honest bored me to death.

In spite of our understanding of chemistry, metallurgy still has quite a few mysteries in store for us. Some of them go back thousands of years.

Um ... nowadays, there are manufacturing jobs that require knowledge of CNC machines and maybe even programming and/or metallurgy.

Usually you run with excess fuel, or 'fuel-rich', as the opposite - oxidiser rich - means you have hot oxidising gases which are harder on the metallurgy.

Oetzi was clearly the victim of dehumanizing, evil modern technologies, like agriculture and metallurgy...

"When I came back to Italy, I asked the university for 20,000 euros to develop a search engine, but instead, they financed a project about the history of copper metallurgy in Italy," he says.

I'd suggest a permanent base on the Moon as a useful first step - it has some water, abundant energy, plenty of Aluminum, Magnesium, Titanium and a lack of atmosphere that makes metallurgy easy.

In the short term, our laws were written with light water reactors in mind, so anybody who wants to build a thorium reactor is going to have to build all the same expensive safety features that light water reactors need, plus the special metallurgy that molten salt reactors need.

Apologies for being somewhat off-topic, but does anybody know if there are citizenship requirements for working at a place like SpaceX?I have a solid background in materials science and metallurgy from a world-class university, and find what Musk is doing very inspirational.

Yes, some people will wash out of metallurgy classes, or projectile calculus, but are these really the people you want taking care of your only means of transportation?Transportation is literally one of the few things that separates us from people in the middle ages, allows us to live and work more than a few meters apart, and enables us to live meaningful lives.

It might be that you could make a thorium reactor much safer than current light-water reactors for cheaper, but the laws regulating our nuclear power were written under the assumption that all reactors were light-water reactors - so in practice you would end up with all the fancy 100% reliable control systems needed to keep the positive feedback loops in a traditional reactor from blowing themselves up as well as the special metallurgy needed by Thorium reactors.

Metallurgy definitions

noun

the science and technology of metals