Sentences with phrase «studied nuclear engineering»

Having studied nuclear engineering is not necessarily helpful, nor are the details of the energy transfer process trivial.
Certainly, it was fully recognized when I studied nuclear engineering 33 years ago.

Not exact matches

«We did this study because understanding how much radiation comes off of common household items helps place radiation readings in context — it puts things in perspective,» says Robert Hayes, an associate professor of nuclear engineering at North Carolina State University.
With a background in nuclear physics, Seifalian also studied nuclear medicine and biochemistry before settling on tissue engineering.
Michael Jacox, assistant director of Texas A&M's Commercial Space Center for Engineering and a nuclear engineer, says he felt compelled to study the Mills cell in relative secrecy when he was a research scientist for the Department of Energy.
Sue Clark, WSU's Regents Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, and Neil Ivory, professor of chemical engineering, will be part of a ACE team studying how nanoscale nuclear materials react in various chemical environments.
Additionally, by engineering FP fusions associated with cellular organelles, scientists have been able to study many cellular processes, including mitosis, mitochondrial fission / fusion, nuclear import, and neuronal trafficking.
Digital and technical skills cut across all workplaces and we need to help students understand that studying subjects like engineering, physics or computer science can be springboards into every industry and into well paid jobs — whether you are working in the city, in a nuclear power plant or for a broadcaster.
Despite her talent in art, she studied physics and nuclear engineering and worked in the software analysis field in the United States and Canada.
It is telling that while there are thousands of articles, studies, books and movies about the relatively miniscule quantities of well - managed spent fuel that comes out of nuclear plants, there is to date only one estimate of how much solar waste the world is on track to produce, and it was calculated for the first time by an 18 - year - old nuclear engineering student from UC Berkeley and (proudly) published yesterday by Environmental Progress.
He was an optical engineer who repaired aircraft instruments in Alaska in WWII, a mountain man who could turn a canoe into a sailboat with a folding machete, bed sheets and a few sticks, who taught me diffraction, color theory and relativity on paper when other kids were learning multiplication tables, who designed a potentiometer that went to the Moon by pointing the world's fastest camera at the world's fastest oscilloscope, who designed those traffic lights which only appear bright when you are in the appropriate lane, who didn't have to help me at all when I built my own Heathkit dual - channel scope in grade school, nor had to help me program my Apple II in machine language, who quit Honeywell to work for 3M when the Space Program turned into the nuclear missile program, who studied mining geology in college after growing up in a mining town in Utah, it was he who taught me, early on: make sure your contraption works!
Other degrees with short timespans to homeownership include: physician assistant studies (2.9 years); computer science (3.5 years); chemical, computer, mining or nuclear engineering (3.6 years); and electrical engineering (EE), electronics and communications engineering or electrical and computer engineering (ECE)(3.7 years).
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