Provider
Issued by Coursera.
Skills validated
Additional information
Fluid Systems Foundations (Pumps & Fans)
A Coursera credential focused on practical fluid systems basics, including pressure losses, pumps and fans, and performance intuition
What this credential covers
This course introduces core concepts used to reason about fluid systems performance. It emphasizes pressure losses and how pumps and fans interact with a system to determine operating point and overall behavior. The goal is to build practical intuition you can apply when working with common pump and fan scenarios in HVAC-style fluid systems
Skills and concepts you can highlight
Pressure losses and their impact on flow, interpreting pump and fan behavior, linking equipment performance to overall system performance, building performance intuition for fluid systems
Who it’s for
Learners and practitioners who want a practical refresher on fluid systems fundamentals, especially anyone working with pumps and fans in HVAC-related contexts. Useful if you need a clearer mental model for how losses and equipment characteristics affect system performance
How to present this on Certifpage
Add the credential under Certifications on your Certifpage profile with the exact name: “Fluid Systems Foundations (Pumps & Fans)” and provider: Coursera. In the description field, summarize the scope in one or two lines (for example: “Practical fluid systems basics: pressure losses, pump/fan behavior, and system performance intuition”). Attach proof such as a Coursera completion screenshot or verification page link if available, and include the issue date from Coursera. When sharing your Certifpage profile, mention the specific concepts you studied (pressure losses, pumps and fans, system performance) to help reviewers quickly match it to HVAC or fluid systems roles
FAQ
Is this a certification or a course credential? Coursera offerings vary by program; list it on Certifpage as a Coursera credential and use the exact title shown on your completion record. What should I link as proof? Use the official Coursera credential or verification URL if you have one, or a completion certificate file or screenshot