<p>I’m an EE major, too, and I’m very “into” math and mathematical areas, and ended up taking a lot of math, CS, physics, etc outside of EE.</p>
<p>Some of the EE courses are very mathematical anyway. You can direct yourself into the electives and tracks which are highly mathematical - EE 241, 301, 364 or 464, 401, 441, 483 are all courses that come to mind as being highly mathematical and possible to fit in as your specialization in EE.</p>
<p>If your interest in math branches a bit into physics as well, courses like EE 330, 338, 470 are very physics-y. EE 330 and 470 are higher level electromagnetics, so it ends up being almost as much vector calc as physics, as well.</p>
<p>The thing about a double major is that there’s additional stuff tacked on, like the College language requirement, the college unit requirement, and possibly the 32-unit additional degree requirement. It’s not easy to double major in engineering+something else (though some have done it)</p>
<p>Math minor is probably very feasible. You already have to take MATH 445 and it’s possible that you could get the EE department to substitute MATH 407 or EE 364 (or math department vice versa) which is 2 courses already there in the EE degree. I don’t know how many courses have to be “unique” for the minor, but oh well.</p>