2003 - 2004
Undergraduate Catalog |
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Nuclear Engineering (NE)Engineering Home | History & Overview | Policies/Procedures | Degree Requirements | Programs | Organizations
Nuclear and radiological engineering application ranges from the use of radiation in medicine for treatment and diagnostics; the design, development and operation of nuclear power systems; numeric simulation of nuclear systems; health physics/radiation protection; biomedical engineering, especially in the area of radiation imaging; nondestructive examination of materials and structures using radiation techniques; nuclear energy for space power and propulsion; and the use of radiation in food processing and industrial process and manufacturing control. The program has sufficient flexibility so that the choice of electives allows emphasis in nuclear power engineering, health physics, engineering physics, nuclear instrumentation, radioisotope applications, radiation imaging, medical treatment and scientific computing. A full complement of experimental facilities is available. Major facilities include a 100 KW research and training reactor, a neutron activation analysis laboratory, a higher performance PC lab with multiple terminals and PCs and interface capability to the college network and the main university computing facility (Northeast Regional Data Center), a Particle Transport and Distributed Computing (PTDC) lab for simulation of nuclear systems. The department also has robotic research facilities along with specialized nuclear instrumentation. Mission The department will provide quality education and conduct nationally recognized research in nuclear and radiological engineering to serve the needs of Florida and the nation. Goals The department’s primary goal is to educate nuclear and radiological engineering professionals to benefit society in the release, control and safe utilization of nuclear energy, radiation and radioactivity. Educational Objectives
Engineering Science and Technical Electives Students should concentrate several elective courses in one discipline to achieve solid familiarity in a minor field of study. The engineering science design technical electives, chosen in consultation with an adviser, allow specialization in reactor engineering, reactor operations, radioisotopes and nuclear radiation technology, and radiation and bio systems. The following electives are available:
Nuclear EngineeringTo remain ‘on track’ for this major a student must meet the following critical tracking criteria. The critical tracking courses appear in bold. Semester 1:
Semester 2:
Semester 3:
Semester 4:
Semester 5:
Total Hours Required for Degree 123 * Complete ENC 2210 with a C grade or better. ** Special Grade Requirements: In addition to the college requirements, all nuclear engineering and nuclear engineering sciences majors must pass all required undergraduate department courses with a C average overall. † Six credits of electives will be selected in an engineering specialty: materials, electrical circuits, electronics, thermodynamics, heat and mass flow, computer sciences, engineering sciences, environmental engineering, or bio-engineering. A recommended computer science sequence would be COP 3530 and either CAP 4700 or CAP 4410. Specialty area electives must be approved by a department adviser. †† All electives must be approved by the department adviser. At least three credits of the engineering science and design or technical elective courses must include non-required 4000-level or 5000-level ENU courses. |
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