Which Canadian colleges offer nuclear engineering programs?

AI Thread Summary
Several colleges in Canada offer nuclear engineering programs, notably the Polytechnic Montreal, which has a dedicated program under the Department of Engineering Physics. In Ontario, McMaster University and the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT) also provide strong nuclear engineering courses, with UOIT located near existing nuclear plants and a new CANDU plant project. The discussion highlights the importance of considering these institutions for students interested in pursuing nuclear engineering. Additionally, the participant is weighing options between mechanical and nuclear engineering, seeking advice and insights on both fields. Overall, these institutions present viable paths for aspiring nuclear engineers in Canada.
praglee
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
can someone help me to find a college in Canada for nuclear engineering?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
praglee said:
can someone help me to find a college in Canada for nuclear engineering?
praglee,

A friend of mine is a professor and teaches nucleaer engineering at the Polytechnic Montreal.

The nuclear engineering program is hosted under the Department of Engineering Physics

http://www.polymtl.ca/nucleaire/en/index.php

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
Here's two in Ontario, McMaster in Hamilton and UOIT in Oshawa... which is in close proximity to 2 present nuclear plants and the 'new' build CANDU plant which by all rumour should be breaking ground soon... about 1 year ago.


http://www.engineering.uoit.ca/undergraduate/nuclear/

http://engphys.mcmaster.ca/research/areas/nuc.htm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
thank you.. thank you.. i am a A level student cambridge university.. and fluctuating between mechanical engineering and nuclear engineering as a future choice.. comments and advice and arguments will be welcome
 
Hello everyone, I am currently working on a burnup calculation for a fuel assembly with repeated geometric structures using MCNP6. I have defined two materials (Material 1 and Material 2) which are actually the same material but located in different positions. However, after running the calculation with the BURN card, I am encountering an issue where all burnup information(power fraction(Initial input is 1,but output file is 0), burnup, mass, etc.) for Material 2 is zero, while Material 1...
Back
Top