| Undergraduate
Course Descriptions |
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- E 115 -
ENGINEERING THERMODYNAMICS (4 units)
Fundamental laws of thermodynamics for simple substances; application
to flow processes and to nonreacting mixtures; statistical thermodynamics
of ideal gases and crystalline solids; chemical and materials
thermodynamics; multiphase and multicomonent equilibria in reacting
systems; electrochemistry. (Fall) Olander
- E 124
- ETHICS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNOLOGY (3 units)
Because of the rapidly changing nature of technology, new and
complex ethical issues are emerging which bring into question
the ability of society to address, and hopefully resolve them.
These new issues are arising in such areas as biotechnology,
information technology, nanotechnology and nuclear technology.
They range from protecting the health and welfare of the public
and the environment, to patenting living organisms and labeling
products containing genetically modified organisms, to biological,
chemical and nuclear weapons of mass destruction, to concerns
regarding the alteration of the ecology of life. This course
focuses on the nature of these emerging technical issues, their
ethical, legal and social ramifications, and what individuals
and our society value in relation to these issues. We will examine
what contemporary philosophy, religion and art, and contemporary
views of natural and social science have to say about these
issues, and about the relationship between individual and societal
values regarding these issues. The goal of this course is to
develop awareness in our students of these issues and a basis
to pursue future study. (Spring) Kastenberg
& G. Hauser-Kastenberg
- E 170A,
E 170B- INTRODUCTION TO MODELING
AND SIMULATION I (2 units)
This course introduces the concepts of analytic modeling and
computer simulation, using small projects drawn from the multidisciplinary
areas of Computational Engineering Science. Those areas covered
span biology, chemistry, applied mathematics, and physics, as
well as all areas of engineering. Models will progress sequentially
through problem statement, mathematical model, approximations
and analytic solution, discrete model, object-oriented model,
implementation and simulation, visualization, and comparison
to analysis, experiment and observation. Part I (this course)
stresses modeling, while Part II (E170B) stresses simulation
and visualization. (Fall, Spring) Verboncoeur
- NE 24 - FRESHMAN SEMINAR, Spring:
E. Morse, Spring: D. Olander,
Fall: W. Kastenberg,
Fall: B. Wirth (1 unit)
Course may be repeated for credit as topic varies. One hour
of seminar per week. The Berkeley Seminar Program has bee designed
to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual
topic with a faculty member in a small-seminar setting. Berkeley
Seminars are offered in all campus department, and topics vary
from department to department and semister to semister. (Spring/Fall)
Professor varies semester to semester.
- NE
39 - ISSUES IN NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
(2 units)
Introduction to topics and issues in nuclear engineering; nuclear
reactions and radiation, radiation protection and control, energy
production and utilization, nuclear fuel cycle, reactor theory,
nuclear power engineering, reactor operation, controlled fusion,
nuclear waste, and medical and other applications of radiation,
advanced research topics. (Spring) Kastenberg
- NE 101
- NUCLEAR REACTIONS AND RADIATION (4 units)
Energetics and kinetics of nuclear reactions and radioactive
decay, fission, fusion, and reactions of energetic neutrons,
properties of the fission products and the actinides; nuclear
models and transition probabilities; interaction of radiation
with matter. (Fall) Norman
- NE
104A - RADIATION DETECTION AND NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTATION
LABORATORY (3 units)
Basic science of radiation measurement, nuclear instrumentation,
neutronics, radiation dosimetry. Two one-hour lectures per week
emphasize the principles of radiation detection. A weekly four-hour
laboratory applies a variety of radiation detection systems
to the practical measurements of interest for nuclear power,
nuclear and non-nuclear science, and environmental applications.
(Spring) Lederer,
Morse
- NE
104B - NUCLEAR ENGINEERING LABORATORY (2
units)
Nuclear materials experiments at high temperature, thermal-hydraulics
and two-phase flow, diagnosis of fusion plasmas and fusion neutrons.
(Fall) Morse
- NE 107
- INTRODUCTION TO IMAGING (3 units)
Introduction to medical imaging physics and systems, including
x-ray computed tomography (CT), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR),
positron emission tomography (PET), and SPECT; basic principles
of tomography and an introduction to unfolding methods; resolution
effects of counting statistics, inherent system resolution and
human factors. (Spring) Prussin
- NE 120
- NUCLEAR MATERIALS (4 units)
Effects of irradiation on the atomic and mechanical properties
of materials in nuclear reactors. Fission product swelling and
release; neutron damage to structural alloys; fabrication and
properties of uranium dioxide fuel. (Fall) Wirth
- NE 124
- RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT (3 units)
Components and material flow sheets for nuclear fuel cycle,
waste characteristics, sources of radioactive wastes, compositions,
radioactivity and heat generation; waste treatment technologies;
waste disposal technologies; safety assessment of waste disposal.
(Fall or Spring) Ahn
- NE 150
- INTRODUCTION TO NUCLEAR REACTOR THEORY (4 units)
Neutron interactions, nuclear fission, and chain reacting systematics
in thermal and fast nuclear reactors. Diffusion and slowing
down of neutrons. Criticality condition and calculations of
critical concentrations, mass and dimensions. Nuclear reactor
dynamics and reactivity feedbacks. Production and transmutation
of radionuclides in nuclear reactors. (Spring) Vujic
- NE 155
- INTRODUCTION TO NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS IN RADIATION TRANSPORT
(3 units)
Computational methods used to analyze radiation transport described
by various differential, integral, and integro-differential
equations. Numerical methods include finite difference, finite
elements, discrete ordinates, and Monte Carlo. Examples from
neutron and photon transport; numerical solutions of neutron/photon
diffusion and transport equations. Monte Carlo simulations of
photon and neutron transport. An overview of optimization techniques
for solving the resulting discrete equations on vector and parallel
computer systems. (Spring) Wirth
- NE 161
- NUCLEAR POWER ENGINEERING (3 units)
Energy conversion in nuclear power systems; design of fission
reactors; thermal and structural analysis of reactor core and
plant components; thermal-hydraulic analysis of accidents in
nuclear power plants; safety evaluation and engineered safety
systems. (Fall) Peterson
- NE 162
- RADIATION BIOPHYSICS AND DOSIMETRY (3 units)
Radiation Biophysics and Dosimetry. Three hours of lectures per week. Interaction of radiation with matter; physical, chemical, and biological effects of radiation on human tissues; dosimetry units and measurements; internal and external radiation fields and dosimetry; radiation exposure regulations; sources of radiation and radioactivity; basic shielding concepts; elements of radiation protection and control; theories and models for cell survival, radiation sensitivity, carcinogenesis and dose calculation. (Spring) Vujic
- NE 167
- NUCLEAR REACTOR SAFETY
Principles and methods used in the safety evaluation of nuclear
power plants. Safety philosophies, design criteria, and regulations.
Deterministic and probabilistic models, reliability analysis,
nuclear and thermal-hydraulic transients, radiological consequences,
and risk assessment. Design-basis and severe accident analysis,
role of engineered safety systems, siting, and licensing.
(Fall) Kastenberg
- NE
170 - NUCLEAR DESIGN
A. DESIGN IN NUCLEAR POWER TECHNOLOGY
AND INSTRUMENTATION (3 units)
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 relationg
to economics, the environment and risk assessment. (Spring)
Ahn, Vujic
B: NUCLEAR DESIGN:
DESIGN IN BIO-NUCLEAR, NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND RADIATION THERAPY
(3 units)
A systems approach to the development of procedures for nuclear
medicine and radiation therapy. Each semester a specific procedure
will be studied and will entail the development of the biological
and physiological basis for a procedure, the chemical and
biochemical characteristics of appropriate drugs, dosimetric
requirements and limitations, the production and distribution
of radionuclides and/or radiation fields to be applied, and
the characteristics of the instrumentation to be used. (Spring)
Ahn, Vujic
- NE 175
- METHODS OF RISK ANALYSIS (3 units)
Methodological approaches for the quantification of technological
risk and risk based decision-making. Probabilistic safety assessment,
human health risks, environmental and ecological risk analysis.
(Fall) Kastenberg
- NE 180
- INTRODUCTION TO CONTROLLED FUSION (3 units)
Introduction to energy production by controlled thermonuclear
reactions. Nuclear fusion reactions, energy balances for fusion
systems, survey of plasma physics, neutral beam injection, RF
heating methods, vacuum systems, tritium handling. (Fall) Morse
- NE 198 - GROUP STUDY FOR ADVANCED
UNDERGRADUATES (1-4 units)
Course may be repeated for credit. Must be taken on a passed/not-passed
basis. Prerequisites: Upper division standing. Group studies
of selected topics. (Fall, Spring)
- NE 199 - SUPERVISED INDEPENDENT STUDY
(1-4 units)
Course may be repeated for credit for a maximum of 4 units
per semester. Individual conferences. Must be taken on a passed/not-passed
basis. Prerequisites: Consent of instructor and major advisor.
Supervised independent study. (Fall/Spring)
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