Nuclear Engineering
The Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Submitted by cmjones on March 14, 2007 - 1:00pm.Department:
NUC ENG
Course Number:
225
Course Title:
The Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Instructor:
Ahn
Description:
This course is intended for
graduate students interested in acquiring a foundation in nuclear fuel cycle
with topics ranging from nuclear-fuel reprocessing to waste treatment and
final disposal. The emphasis is on the relationship between nuclear-power utilization
and its environmental
impacts. The goal is for graduate engineering students to gain sufficient
understanding in how nuclear-power utilization affects the environment, so that they are
better prepared to design an advanced system that would result in minimized environmental impact. The lectures
will consist of two parts. The first half includes mathematical models for
individual processes in a fuel cycle, such as nuclear fuel reprocessing,
waste solidification, repository performance, and nuclear transmutation in a
nuclear reactor. In the second half, these individual models are integrated,
which enables students to evaluate environmental impact of a fuel cycle.
Units:
3
Offered:
Spring
Course Type:
Graduate
Methods of Risk Analysis
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 2:00pm.Department:
NUC ENG
Course Number:
175
Course Title:
Methods of Risk Analysis
Instructor:
Kastenberg
Description:
Methodological approaches for
the quantification of technological risk and risk based decision making.
Probabilistic safety assessment, human health risks, environmental and ecological risk analysis.
Units:
3
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Nuclear Design: Design in Nuclear Power Technology and Instrumentation
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 1:59pm.Department:
NUC ENG
Course Number:
170A
Course Title:
Nuclear Design: Design in Nuclear Power Technology and Instrumentation
Instructor:
Ahn, Vujic
Description:
Design of various fission and
fusion power systems and other physically based applications. Each semester a
topic will be chosen by the class as a whole. In addition to technology, the
design should address issues relating to economics, the environment, and risk assessment.
Units:
3
Offered:
Spring
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Radiation Detection and Nuclear Instrumentation Laboratory
Submitted by cmjones on March 12, 2007 - 1:58pm.Department:
NUC ENG
Course Number:
104A
Course Title:
Radiation Detection and Nuclear Instrumentation Laboratory
Instructor:
Laderer
Description:
Basic science of radiation
measurement, nuclear instrumentation, neutronics, radiation dosimetry.
Applications to nuclear and non-nuclear research, medicine, environmental science and
technology, and a variety of other technologies.
Units:
3
Offered:
Spring
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Kastenberg, William
Submitted by cmjones on March 5, 2007 - 2:13pm.Name of Person:
William Kastenberg
Picture:

Department:
Nuclear Engineering, Professor
Research Interests:
Ethical issues in emerging technologies, risk assessment and risk management for technological and natural complex systems, nuclear reactor safety, environmental risk analysis, environmental conflict resolution.
Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory (RAEL)
Submitted by cmjones on February 23, 2007 - 2:06pm.Name of Research Center:
Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory (RAEL)
Description:
The Renewable and Appropriate Laboratory is a unique new research, development, project implementation, and community outreach facility based at UCB in the Energy and Resources Group and the Department of Nuclear Engineering. RAEL focuses on designing, testing, and disseminating renewable and appropriate energy systems. The laboratory's mission is to help these technologies realize their full potential to contribute to environmentally sustainable development in both industrialized and developing nations while also addressing the cultural context and range of potential social impacts of any new technology or resource management system.
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Nuclear Engineering
Submitted by cmjones on February 15, 2007 - 2:29pm.Name of Degree Program:
Nuclear Engineering
Course Type:
Undergraduate
