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Introduction to Nuclear Engineering (3rd Edition)
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Introduction to Nuclear Engineering (3rd Edition) | Hardcover

by John R. Lamarsh (Author), Anthony J. Baratta (Author)

List Price: $166.67  
Price:  $119.93
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Binding:  Hardcover
Publisher:  Prentice Hall
Edition:  3rd Edition
Page Count:  783 Pages
Publication Date:  March 31, 2001
Sales Rank:  473,045rd


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Product Description
The text is designed for junior and senior level Nuclear Engineering students. The third edition of this highly respected text offers the most current and complete introduction to nuclear engineering available. Introduction to Nuclear Engineering has been thoroughly updated with new information on French, Russian, and Japanese nuclear reactors. All units have been revised to reflect current standards. In addition to the numerous end-of-chapter problems, computer exercises have been added.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 15 reviews)

Good Nuclear Engineering Book by Luis E. Londono (Garland, TX) 5 Stars
March 27, 2009
I have studied the most important chapters of the book "Introduction to Nuclear Engineering". It is more than an introduction. I found the book to be a very good one for someone with some fundamental knowledge of nuclear technology. When I started the reading of the book, I had some knowledge already. The book helped me to go deeper into the nuclear subject. I found the example problems to be very good. I really recommend this book. I did not find that many typos as other reviewers claim.

This book is terrible, especially for those new to nuclear engineering by Larry R (Las Vegas, NV USA) 1 Stars
November 21, 2008
There are only 1 or 2 books that I have wanted to burn more than this one. The chapters seem reasonable when reading through them; however, when you attempt to solve the problems at the end of the chapter you realize that the chapter you just read was useless. After realizing this, you look for sample problems, which there are very few of and they rarely seem to help. The problems at the end of the chapter are often poorly worded and the author wants you to take leaps and bounds to make assumptions to solve problems. It is annoying and not at all intuitive. Even my professor has admitted that the book sucks and that he will be looking for a new book to teach from. Maybe this book wouldn't seem so bad if I had taken nuclear physics first, but I'm not sure if that would really help. Please do not buy this book, it will only reinforce the publisher's desire to sell it and not replace it with something better.

Solid book, but with a few glaring defects by Jesse Rorabaugh (Ithaca NY) 4 Stars
September 28, 2008
This book is well written, and covers a lot of important material reasonably well. You will learn a lot by reading it. It does however have one huge defect for anyone who because of poor quality teaching, or because they are just really interested in the field, has decided to use the book to teach themselves Nuclear Engineering. There are no solutions to any problems in the book. Most textbooks, at least introductory text books, give numerical answers to selected problems. This makes it possible for a student to do a problem, and ensure that he did it correct. Without it working problems is an exercise in futility as you will never know if you did them correctly. Since working out problems is the single best way to learn a technical subject you are probably best looking elsewhere for a book to learn from.

Contains Excellent Information And Several Distractions by Robert I. Hedges 4 Stars
July 19, 2008
First, the caveat to my review: I am probably unique among the reviewers of this book in that I am not a nuclear engineer. I have a strong educational and professional background in chemistry, physics, and math, and have been working on projects involving engineered safety systems and risk management in other technologically advanced industries. I have recently become involved in talks with representatives from the nuclear industry. For my own preparation I undertook the long hard slog through the Lamarsh-Baratta book, "Introduction to Nuclear Engineering" (Third Edition) to help me grasp background information and concepts in this field. Although I was sometimes initially unclear about the use of units (barns, dollars, etc.) and nomenclature (meat, safe shutdown earthquake, etc.) I generally found the text to eventually explain them adequately. One critique is that at some points in the text the authors use terminology freely without first defining it, only to define it much later. I found this and the relatively large number of typographical errors to be distracting. This is clearly a very complex subject, and would no doubt be helped by good classroom instruction. Nonetheless, I still found considerable value in the book. I liked chapter seven, "The Time-Dependent Reactor" particularly well, and especially found sections 7.3 and 7.5 "Control Rods and Chemical Shim" and "Fission Product Poisoning" to be enlightening. I found the commentary on reactor stability and the explanation of post-shutdown Xenon-135 buildup and reactor deadtime extremely helpful. I also found section 7.6 on incore fuel management useful. From my experience in aviation (where it is a common parameter), I enjoyed the discussion of the utility of the Reynolds number in section 8.4, and found the ensuing discussions of turbulent flow, liquid metals, and boiling heat transfer to be fascinating. My safety systems background is primarily in aviation, where it is stressed that every design is a compromise: I was pleased to see the same acknowledged on p. 455 by Bill Minkler (who now writes the "Backscatter" commentary for "Nuclear News") with his quote that reactor design is "the art of compromise." I was pleased with chapters nine ("Radiation Protection") and eleven ("Reactor Licensing, Safety, and the Environment"), which are the most directly applicable to me. The concept of "Relative Biological Effectiveness" is well covered beginning on p. 472, and the discussions of radiation protection are helpful. I found the section dealing with deterministic versus stochastic effects of radiation on pp. 479-480 to be helpful, and thought the glossary of radiation protection on pp. 539-542 to be a valuable reference. I wanted to better understand the principles of Monte Carlo analysis, which is covered in chapter ten, and while much of the discussion was helpful, it was a bit more general than I had expected. The overview of reactor licensing in chapter eleven is quite helpful, although becoming a bit dated. The discussion of multiple barriers to prevent to escape of radiation begins on p. 623 and provides an excellent general overview to the safety systems involved at a reactor site. Section 11.4 ("Dispersion of Effluents") was excellent overall, with plume formation and diffusion of effluents well covered for all Pasquill conditions (except G). This was an area new to me, as I have minimal meteorological knowledge, and I found the qualitative explanations and illustrations to be excellent, although the mathematical reasoning was at some points a bit hard to follow. The discussion of Design Basis Accidents (and particularly LOCA scenarios) beginning on p. 681 is excellent, as is the recap of the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl accidents which follow. I was pleased to see the introduction to risk management beginning on p. 711, which discusses 10CFR50.34a requiring operators to keep radioactive materials in effluents "as low as reasonably achievable." Oddly, the book the fails to name the acronym that logically follows from this (ALARA, of course) or discuss its use in the contemporary nuclear community to any significant degree. There is a lot of great content here, and while I am sure that I missed some of the more intricate mathematical nuances of the book, I think it was helpful to me overall. The book is sometimes a bit unclear, and some of the mathematical reasoning seems a bit fuzzy. A bigger complaint is that each chapter has numerous problems at the end, yet there is no answer key to determine if you did the problem correctly. I don't claim to have as much experience in the field as the vast majority of people who will read and review this book, but I do believe that overall the book, while not perfect, gives a good introduction to the subject, and will serve as a valuable reference in the future.

Many Errors by Lucchese (the Sierras) 3 Stars
December 26, 2007
Read the book cover-to-cover. For third edition, it has an astounding number of typos and errors - dozens per chapter - many math blunders - a few conceptual mistakes. It's fairly distracting from the material. The reader is constantly second-guessing the text - looking for next mistake, which is never far away. There's something dysfunctional about this publishing team - to continue ignoring the huge number of errors - now into the third edition. (The list of "errata" at the Prentice-Hall website is obsolete. All of those have already been corrected - printed 2005. Their list says nothing about the hundreds of errors in our copy.)

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