Dear Alumni/ae and Friends of NSE,
With the Spring semester in full swing NSE is buzzing with events and activities.
On March 3rd Lady Barbara Judge presented the 12th
David J. Rose Lecture in Nuclear Technology. In her lecture on “Nuclear
Policies, Practices, and Problems”, Lady Judge, the former Chair of the
U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, shared her insights into the many
challenges facing nations looking to launch new nuclear programs. You
can read about the lecture here.
A day later the Department hosted the inaugural Rising Stars in Nuclear Science and Engineering
symposium. The symposium featured presentations by twelve outstanding
young women researchers in nuclear and related fields from across the
country. Organized by NSE Professors Paola Cappellaro, Anne White, and Bilge Yildiz,
the symposium provided an opportunity for women on the verge of
launching their careers in nuclear science and engineering to share
their research and connect with each other and with established
academics and practitioners. The day began with a conversation with Dr.
Allison Macfarlane, Chair of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and
also featured a lunch talk by Lady Judge and a panel discussion with
several MIT professors on how to make an academic career in nuclear
science and engineering. As one of our students noted, “it’s amazing to
be in this room with all these women who are all doing awesome
research!”
Strengthening the pipeline bringing talented women
engineers and scientists into our field is a central element of NSE’s
strategy, and recently I was delighted to be able to announce an
extraordinarily generous gift by David Leighton endowing two fellowships
for women graduate students in NSE. David, one of MIT’s first master’s
graduates in nuclear engineering (in 1953, before the Department had
even been formed) served our country with distinction for 26 years
designing and constructing nuclear-powered navy ships under Admiral
Hyman Rickover. At the same celebratory dinner we also honored Michele Kearney, Mason Willrich, and Ray Rothrock
(SM ’78) for their tremendous support of NSE. (Ray, who is better known
as one of the country’s leading venture capitalists, is also the
co-executive producer of Pandora’s Promise,
a documentary which recently premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.
The movie tells the story of erstwhile anti-nuclear activists who are
now convinced of the importance of nuclear energy. We’re hoping to have a
special screening at MIT later in the spring.)
In the meantime,
the current generation of NSE students is demonstrating leadership of
its own. In April the MIT Student Chapter of the American Nuclear
Society will host the 2013 National ANS Student Conference. Our students
are expecting around 500 of their colleagues from the U.S. and overseas
to participate in the conference, whose theme is the “Public Image of
the Nuclear Engineer”. You can find up-to-date information about the
conference here.
Several NSE students have recently been in the national spotlight. In its annual 30 under 30 feature, which identifies some of the country’s most talented young ‘disruptors, innovators, and entrepreneurs’, Forbes magazine
proclaimed that ‘The Future of Energy is Nuclear’, and named current
NSE graduate students Leslie Dewan and Mark Massie and recent alum
Robert Petroski (Ph.D. ’11) to its 30 under 30 energy list. Also, three current NSE seniors — Cameron McCord, Ekaterina Paramonova, and Ethan Peterson — were named to Business Insider’s list of the “14 most impressive students at MIT”. Read their stories here.
These
are just a few of the outstanding students whose energy, imagination
and intelligence drive so much of what takes place in our Department
every day.
Finally, NSE gives a warm send-off to our colleague
Prof. Ernie Moniz. Ernie has worked closely with NSE faculty and
students in recent years, and we wish him every success as the nation’s
next Secretary of Energy.
All the best for the Spring season.
-- Richard
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