The Department of Nuclear Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley invites applications for a non-tenure or tenure faculty position targeting nuclear instrumentation. More information is available here.
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Thursday, June 11 Noon Boston time (16:00 UTC)
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SASHA ASGHARI – Nuclear Engineering, Univ. of California-Berkeley
“Looking Forward: A Framework for Robust IAEA Neutron Detection Capabilities”
Abstract
Due to its favorable neutron detection characteristics and historically low price, the international safeguards regime has come to heavily rely on helium-3-based neutron detectors to aid in the verification of compliance with the Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). However, the recent helium-3 shortage has the potential to create instability in international safeguards. This work focuses on possible short-, medium-, and long-term options to decouple the efficacy of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards from uncertainty in the helium-3 market. By exploring the establishment of a framework for incorporating alternate neutron detectors in the long run, the IAEA can help maintain the efficacy of international safeguards and the nonproliferation regime.
Bio
Alexandra (Sasha) Asghari is currently a graduate student at UC Berkeley pursuing a PhD in Nuclear Engineering with an emphasis on radiation detection and nuclear nonproliferation policy. She graduated with a BS in Physics from California State University-Sacramento in 2012. Currently, she is working with Adam Bernstein and Steven Dazeley at LLNL on a novel Gadolinium-doped water Cherenkov neutron detector as a possible alternative to some helium-3 detectors. Sasha is particularly interested in the nexus of science (radiation detection) and policy (nonproliferation of nuclear weapons).
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Detection of Nuclear ProliferationNetwork Science Idea ChallengePrize: $2,000Deadline: July 15, 2015(Winners will be announced on August 15, 2015)Sponsored by the United States Department of EnergyDefense Nuclear Nonproliferation R&D
Nuclear nonproliferation encompasses many networks: power-generation reactors to mining, transport, conversion, enrichment, and storage networks. Financial, industrial, communications, sensor, knowledge, and accountancy networks all tie in. So do political, social, and professional networks. Multiple networks with multiple interdependencies. The idea challenge is to formulate a problem in nonproliferation, proliferation detection, or treaty monitoring and verification that could (possibly) be solved with a network science approach. The problem should be one that would be otherwise difficult to approach.Submit a 3-5 page white paper describing your idea and submit it in PDF format to James Kornell (korneljm@nv.doe.gov) by the deadline.For more information, see the attached guidelines.Eligibility:
- Undergraduates, graduate students, and postdocs at UCSB, the Middlebury (Monterey) Institute of International Studies, and NSSC academic institutions (UCB, UCD, UCI, UNLV, MSU, WUSTL) are eligible to apply.
- No citizenship restriction
- Teamwork is encouraged; submit only one white paper per team