Skip to main content
Graph
Search
fr
|
en
Login
Search
All
Categories
Concepts
Courses
Lectures
MOOCs
People
Practice
Publications
Startups
Units
Show all results for
Home
Lecture
Introduction to Nuclear Engineering: Chain Reactions and Fuel Cycles
Graph Chatbot
Related lectures (32)
Previous
Page 1 of 4
Next
Introduction to Nuclear Engineering
Introduces nuclear engineering, covering reactions, chain reactions, fuel cycle, criticality, and multiplication factors.
Physics of Nuclear Reactors: Fundamentals and Advanced Concepts
Explores the fundamentals and challenges of nuclear reactors, covering neutron diffusion, fission, breeding, transmutation, and advanced technologies.
Reactor Technology: Reactivity Variations and Control
Explores reactivity variations in reactor technology, covering short-term, medium-term, and long-term effects, means of control, and consequences.
Introduction to Nuclear Engineering
Introduces nuclear engineering concepts, covering reactor technology, physics, safety measures, fission reactions, and reactor safety.
Neutron chain-reacting systems
Explores chain reactions, multiplication factor, fuel cycles, reactor design, and types of nuclear reactors, ending with a summary of key concepts.
Nuclear Fission: Total Cross Section Analysis
Analyzes the total cross section data for nuclear fission, covering energy dependence, transport, reactions, uncertainties, fission fragments, and radiological hazards.
Nuclear Fission: Energy Release and Neutron Interactions
Explores nuclear fission, energy release, fission neutrons, and practical fuels in a nuclear reactor.
Nuclear fission: Energy Release and Fission Fragments
Explores energy release from fission, fuel burnup, and fission fragments yields and decay in a nuclear reactor.
Neutron chain-reacting systems
Explores practical fission fuels, chain reactions, and multiplication factors in nuclear reactors.
The Diffusion of Neutrons
Covers the transport of neutrons, scalar neutron flux, neutron currents, and more, along with fuel cycles and types of nuclear reactors.