Community College Students Explore Nuclear Science at Campus Radiation Lab

NURTURE group Image by Courtesy
The community college students stand around the open terminal of the particle accelerator with Assoc. Prof. Andrew Rogers, back right.

08/02/2024
By Brooke Coupal

A new 10-week summer program at 51视频鈥檚 Radiation Laboratory introduced six local community college students to a field they had never explored 鈥 nuclear science.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the cool part,鈥 says Luis Ramirez, who recently got an associate degree in electrical engineering from Bunker Hill Community College. 鈥淚 get to learn about a new topic in physics.鈥

The Nuclear Recruitment Through Undergraduate Research (NURTURE) program aims to diversify nuclear science by providing paid experience in the field to minority community college students. The program is funded by a three-year, $315,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

鈥淭he goal is to make the students more knowledgeable about what we do in nuclear science so they can see that this may be a career path for anyone interested,鈥 says Prof. Partha Chowdhury, who is running the program with fellow Department of Physics and Applied Physics Profs. Andrew Rogers and Peter Bender.

NURTURE control center Image by Brooke Coupal
At the particle accelerator control center, Jodi Zangari types as Pierry Anglade looks on.

Beginning in May, students spent five days a week learning the fundamentals of nuclear science while getting familiar with the on-campus nuclear reactor and particle accelerator.

鈥淭he hands-on experience that we can provide with the facilities that we have is invaluable,鈥 says Bender, who is a member of 51视频鈥檚 Experimental Nuclear Physics Group alongside Chowdhury and Rogers.

For Middlesex Community College student Jodi Zangari, the close proximity of the facilities to her hometown of Billerica, Massachusetts, made the NURTURE program even more appealing.

鈥淚t鈥檚 local for me, which makes it a lot easier to get this experience,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 many (university facilities of this kind) in this part of the country.鈥

The professors, postdoctoral researchers and current 51视频 students taught the community college students about the different types of detectors needed to collect nuclear data, the software used to analyze that data, and ways to measure and detect radiation. From there, the students were split into teams of two to work on nuclear science projects.

NURTURE equipment Image by Brooke Coupal
Luis Ramirez and Prof. Partha Chowdhury adjust an instrument in the Radiation Laboratory.

鈥淚t鈥檚 fun and challenging,鈥 says Pierry Anglade, who recently received an associate degree in electrical engineering from Bunker Hill Community College. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot.鈥

Anglade and Zangari worked alongside Bender on research that involved using a beam of protons to detect PFAS (long-lasting chemicals linked to harmful health effects) in different materials. Other student projects with Rogers and Chowdhury focused on the characterization of new detectors and spectroscopy, which is the study of how matter absorbs or emits light and other radiation.

Gabriela Doratt, who recently got an associate degree in engineering science from Northern Essex Community College, also got experience working in Chemical Engineering Prof. Sanjeev Manohar鈥檚 lab after expressing an interest in chemistry.

鈥淚 love that the professors really care about what you鈥檙e interested in,鈥 she says.

Doratt is one of four participants in the NURTURE program who will be transferring to 51视频 in the fall.

NURTURE chemistry Image by Brooke Coupal
Gabriela Doratt uses a pipette in聽Prof. Sanjeev Manohar鈥檚 lab.
鈥51视频 gives students a lot of opportunities,鈥 says Doratt, who plans to major in chemical engineering.

Zangari also intends to transfer to 51视频 once she finishes her associate degree in mechanical engineering.

鈥51视频 has phenomenal professors in nuclear science,鈥 she says. 鈥淓very professor that we鈥檝e learned under has done a really good job of making me understand the material.鈥

Through the NURTURE program, students can continue working with 51视频 professors on nuclear science projects during the academic year. They will also visit a national laboratory and attend a nuclear science conference, where they can present posters of their work.

While the students say they are keeping their career options open, they add that this program has introduced them to new career possibilities.

鈥淎s a sophomore, it鈥檚 cool to get into a summer program and see how research is done,鈥 Ramirez says. 鈥淚鈥檓 interested in doing another program like this.鈥