Foundations for success as a leader after MITStudent Profile | Russell Rodewald SB’10
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Professor Mujid Kazimi wins ANS 2009 Technical Achievement Award in Thermal Hydraulics
The award was established by Thermal Hydraulics Division (THD) in 1984 to recognize outstanding past or current technical achievement. It is normally presented annually to a member of the THD. The award is granted to an individual ‘based on a major contribution to the state of the art, an important publication, a major technical achievement, or a sustained record of accomplishment and technical excellence in the art or science of Thermal Hydraulics.’ Professor Kazimi’s research includes work in nuclear systems safety, the nuclear fuel cycle, two-phase flow and heat transfer. He has served on a variety of safety, educational and research committees, including for the National Research Council and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. He is a fellow of the American Nuclear Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The award will be presented on November 17 at the ANS meeting. Professor Kazimi will give a talk entitled "Re-Engineering the Light Water Reactor" at 4:00PM following the awards ceremony.
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President Obama to nominate Professor George Apostolakis as Commissioner of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
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Professor Richard Lester named as new NSE Department Head
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MIT's new energy minor provides a multidisciplinary approach to understanding the policy, economics, science and technology of energyRead more Starting this year, all MIT undergraduate students have a new academic option available to them: a minor in energy, which can be combined with any major subject. The new minor, unlike most energy concentrations available at other institutions, and unlike any other concentration at MIT, is designed to be inherently cross-disciplinary, encompassing all of MITs five schools. |
Nuclear Power, Weapons Proliferation, and Climate Change: New Issue of Journal Daedalus Explores the Global Nuclear FutureIn the future there will be more nuclear technology spread across more nations than ever before. Will the growth of nuclear power lead to increased risks of nuclear weapons proliferation and nuclear terrorism? Will the nonproliferation regime be adequate to ensure safety and security in a world more widely and heavily invested in nuclear power? Policy experts, economists, scientists, and nuclear industry leaders from various perspectives and nations explore these questions in a special two-volume issue of Daedalus, the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The first volume will be published October 9. The authors examine the interconnected issues of a potential worldwide expansion of civilian nuclear power, attendant risks of weapons proliferation and nuclear terrorism, and the prospects for lessening the impact of climate change through growth in nuclear energy. >> read more |