Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2021 Fall Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 66, Number 8
Monday–Thursday, October 11–14, 2021; Virtual; Eastern Daylight Time
Session QM: Mini-Symposium: The Next Generation Nuclear Workforce II
11:30 AM–1:30 PM,
Thursday, October 14, 2021
Room: White Hill
Chair: Paul Gueye, FRIB/NSCL
Abstract: QM.00004 : NuSTEAM - Nuclear Science in Texas to Enhance and Advance Minorities*
12:06 PM–12:18 PM
Presenter:
Claudia Ratti
(University of Houston)
Authors:
Claudia Ratti
(University of Houston)
Rene Bellwied
(University of Houston)
Anthony Timmins
(University of Houston)
Daniel D Cherdack
(University of Houston)
Lawrence S Pinsky
(University of Houston)
Israel Portillo Vazquez
(University of Houston)
Jorge A Munoz
(University of Texas at El Paso)
Efrain J Ferrer
(University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)
Vivian F Incera
(University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)
Premkumar Saganti
(Prairie View A&M University)
Gary Erickson
(Prairie View A&M University)
The University of Houston serves as a host for the summer program of the year-long traineeship. After completing a six-week summer course at UH, Brookhaven National Laboratory hosts the students for a two-week hands-on experience in the laboratory environment. The curriculum of the summer course focuses on developing a Nuclear Physics based skill set, which will be applicable to future professions in academia and industry within the Nuclear Physics field. Areas that will be covered in the course are low- and high-energy Nuclear Physics research, nuclear radiation applications in Space Science and Medical Physics, Instrumentation and Detectors, Electronics, Software Development, Analysis tools, Machine Learning, and finally Networking, Presentation Skills and Career Planning. Upon returning to their home institutions, the students are supported for the Fall and Spring semesters for 15 hrs/week, while working on a research topic chosen through the traineeship program. First-year topics include nuclear and high energy data analysis, neutrino and dark matter data analysis, phenomenological modeling of data from RHIC and LHC, radiation physics studies, machine learning applications in nuclear physics, detector development and calibration as well as electronics testing for new instruments. The program is presently funded for two years, but based on the overwhelming response to our initial solicitation from the Texas nuclear community we hope to initiate a sustainable effort in support of local minority undergraduate students.
*DOE
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