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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Two hours of lecture and three hours of laboratory per week. Prerequisites: ENNU455 and ENNU480 and Senior standing in nuclear engineering. Senior capstone design course. Major design experience that emphasizes putting student's engineering knowledge into practice. Design topic is one of current interest in nuclear engineering. Design methodology, creativity, feasibility, reliability, and economic analyses of the overall design required. Students work in teams, and present oral and written design reports.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Repeatable to 12 credits if content differs. Special topics selected by the faculty for students in the Professional Master of Engineering Program.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MATH246, PHYS270 and 271 (Formerly: PHYS263), or permission of instructor. Credit will be granted for only one of the following: ENRE445 or ENRE489C. Formerly ENRE489C. Topics covered include: fundamental understanding of how things fail, probabilistic models to represent failure phenomena, life-models for non-repairable items, reliability data collection and analysis and applicable quality techniques. Distribution functions such as the normal, Weibull, exponential, binomial, and gamma are explored.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MATH246, PHYS270 and 271 {Formerly: PHYS263}, or permission of instructor. Credit will be granted for only one of the following: ENRE446 or ENRE489D. Formerly ENRE489D. Topics covered include: System modeling and analysis, designing for reliability, reliability testing, reliability in manufacturing, and reliability management. Fault tree analysis, RBD, and cut sets are covered along with sneak circuits, time-on-test plots and acceptance testing.
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3.00 Credits
Credit will be granted for only one of the following: ENRE445 or ENRE447. Formerly ENRE445. Topics covered include: fundamental understanding of how things fail, probabilistic models to represent failure phenomena, life-models for non-repairable items, reliability data collection and analysis, software reliability models, and human reliability models.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CMSC114 or CMSC214; and CMSC/MATH475 or MATH461; or permission of department. Topics covered include: Methods for unit testing, and system testing; Structural testing (flowgraphs and data-flows); Functional testing (behavioral models and textual descriptions); Deterministic and statistical generation of inputs; testing of object-oriented programs.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: permission of department. Repeatable to 6 credits if content differs. Selected topics of current importance in reliability engineering.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture and one hour of discussion/recitation per week. Not open to students who have completed BSCI235 or PBIO205. One of two required courses that introduce students to the topics studied and methods employed in environmental science and policy. Emphasis on scientific ways of knowing; the systems, cycles, flows, and interfaces that characterize the atmosphere, lithosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere; the analysis of human impacts on these systems; and the nature of scientific uncertainty and methods of quantifying environmental processes.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours of lecture and one hour of discussion/recitation per week. Second of two courses that introduce students to the topics studied and methods employed in environmental science and policy. Emphasis on the process of formulating, implementing, and evaluating policy responses to environmental problems, with particular attention to policy controversies related to scientific uncertainty, risk assessment, the valuation of nature, and distributional equity. May be taken before or after ENSP101.
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1.00 Credits
Not open to students who have completed more than 60 credits. Credit will be granted for only one of the following: CPSP118E or ENSP210. Explore environment-related majors and careers. Begin academic planning and professional development activities. A course for freshmen and sophomores.
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