Inquiry about M.S. Nuclear Engineering programs

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a Nuclear Engineering undergraduate student seeking insights into various Master's programs. The student has applied to the University of Michigan and NC State, received acceptance from the University of Tennessee, and plans to apply to Oregon State and South Carolina. Their research interests focus on core modeling and design, specifically with experience in tools like CASMO, Serpent, PARCS, and PATHS. They are looking for information on faculty expertise, research facilities, collaborations with national labs, and funding opportunities at these institutions. The student has already conducted preliminary research and engaged with faculty but seeks additional perspectives to make an informed decision before the application deadline.
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I'm in my last semester of my Nuclear Engineering B.S. at Michigan and looking at M.S. programs. The main schools I'm looking at are University of Michigan (already applied), NC State (already applied), University of Tennessee (accepted upon receipt of degree confirmation, final marks, and official transcript), Oregon State (will apply), and South Carolina (will apply).

I have research interest in core modeling and design (Work with Hitachi RBWR Burner, know CASMO, Serpent, PARCS, PATHS) and was wondering if anyone could offer insight into the faculty, facilities, work with national labs, funding, etc., of the listed schools pertaining to my research interests.

I have done my own research on these universities and talked with some faculty, but any additional insight would be greatly appreciated. I'll be taking my decision down to the deadline and want to make the best choice I can.

Thank you for your time reading this wall of text.
 
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I know the faculty at the University of Michigan quite well (esp. Dr. Thomas Downar), but if anyone has experience with graduate level research and coursework here I would be very appreciative of any information.
 
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