Nationality Canada Name Paul Wilson | Role Nuclear engineer | |
Institutions University of Wisconsin-Madison Doctoral advisors Douglass HendersonUlrich FischerGunther Kessler Doctoral students Kerry DunnEric EdwardsMatthew GiddenPo HuKathryn HuffBrian KiedrowskiAhmad IbrahimPhiphat PhruksarojanakunStuart SlatteryRachel SlaybaughBrandon Smith Known for ACIALARACyclusDAGMCNAYGN Notable awards ANS Presidential Citation (1996)Marie Curie Research Fellow (1996-1998)Vilas Mid-Career Investigator Award (2014)Discovery Fellow, Wisconsin Institute for Discovery Alma mater University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Toronto, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Fields Nuclear engineering, Computational science | ||
Residence United States of America |
Day in the life paul wilson
Paul Philip Hood Wilson (born October 13, 1971) is a professor of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, nuclear energy communicator, and advocate of modern computational science practices. He is well known for leading the production of the computational nuclear engineering toolkits ALARA, Cyclus, and DAGMC. He is also the founding president of the North American Young Generation in Nuclear and is the Faculty Director of the Advanced Computing Initiative (ACI) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Education
Wilson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland and was raised in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, Canada. He obtained a Bachelor of Applied Science in Engineering Science in the Nuclear Power option of the Engineering Science program at the University of Toronto. He then obtained a Doktor-Ingenieur degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Institute for Neutron Physics and Reactor Engineering of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. He subsequently earned a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1999. There, Wilson became an assistant professor in August 2001, associate professor in July 2008, and full professor in January 2013.
At the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Wilson serves on the Executive Committee of the Wisconsin Energy Institute, the Steering Committee of the Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies, and as Faculty Director of the Advanced Computing Initiative. He also served as Chair of the Energy Analysis & Policy Program (2008–13).
Honors
Work
Wilson has contributed an array of computational advances to nuclear engineering: