Congratulations to NSSC Faculty member Prof. Raluca Scarlat on winning the Society of Hellman Fellows Fund with her proposal: “The Relationship between Acidity of Molten Salts and Their Properties.”
The purpose of the prestigious Hellman Fellows Program is to support the research of promising assistant professors who show capacity for great distinction in their chosen fields of endeavor.
Want to help develop a new technology to better understand nuclear accidents, prevent nuclear smuggling, and make the world a safer place?
The Nuclear Science and Security Consortium at the University of California, Berkeley welcomes applications for an undergraduate research assistant in neutron spectrum unfolding algorithms. The student will use artificial neural networks to deconvolute the measurements from a neutron detector. The responsibilities of this position will include writing software in Python, constructing neural networks in TensorFlow, Monte Carlo transport modeling using MCNP6, and attending a weekly group meeting to discuss progress. This assistantship provides potential opportunities for authorship of peer-reviewed journal articles. Successful candidates will have a passion for science and an interest in experimental nuclear physics.
Conceptualization of unfolding process with neural networks.
Required:
Undergraduate degree in progress at UC Berkeley
Experience working within an interdisciplinary team
U.S. Citizen
Highly Preferred:
Junior or senior-level standing
Familiarity with Python, neural networks, TensorFlow
Familiarity with Monte Carlo transport codes, like MCNP
Coursework/experience with nuclear or radiation physics
Undergraduates The position is at $20 per hour, 40 hours per week, during a Summer 2021 remote internship.
Please put “UNDERGRADUATE SUMMER RESEARCH IN MACHINE LEARNING APPLIED TO NEUTRON SPECTRUM UNFOLDING” in the subject line of your email. Deadline to apply 6/1/2021.
Kathryn Huff, a former Fellow with the Nuclear Science and Security Consortium, has accepted an appointment to a senior leadership position in the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy.
Read the full details here. Congratulations Dr. Huff!