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GRADUATE PROGRAM IN WATER RESOURCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING |
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The graduate program in Water Resources & Environmental Engineering at Rutgers University, focuses on environmental pollution control, management, and protection of resources, including air, water and land. The student can specialize in the areas of air quality management/pollution control, risk assessment, waste management (including environmental restoration, groundwater management, and solid/hazardous/mixed waste management), water quality/control (including waste treatment, industrial and municipal wastewater treatment and disposal, and aquatic chemistry), and water resources engineering and management.
The program usually focuses on the application of quantitative techniques to practical problems encountered in the field of environmental engineering, and is based on advanced analytical, numerical, and statistical methods applied to water chemistry; microbiology; transport processes in surface and ground waters; hydrology of surface and ground waters; hydroclimatology of land-atmospheric interactions; hydrometeorology; and geochemistry, geomorphology, and applied geophysics.
The major areas of emphasis for graduate programs are Water Resources, Treatment Processes, Fluid Mechanics & Coastal Engineering, Water & Air Quality Management, Environmental Engineering Science.
Courses
16:180:561. (F) ADVANCED WATER SUPPLY AND SEWERAGE (3) Medlar
16:180:562. (S) DESIGN OF WATER AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT (3) Medlar
16:180:563. (F) ADVANCED HYDROLOGY (3) Hydrologic processes and modeling evapotranspiration, infiltration, precipitation and snow melt, overland flow subsurface and surface flow relations, channel and watershed routing hydraulic flood routing, numerical methods; watershed modeling; stochastic processes in hydrology; flood and drought risks, flood plain analysis and management.
16:180:564. (S) UNIT PROCESSES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING (3) Theory and laboratory experiments demonstrating the design requirements associated with unit processes in water and sewage treatment. Advanced methods of analysis such as spectroscopy, potentiometry, polarography, conductivity, and chromatography.
16:180:566. (F) SEDIMENT TRANSPORT (3) Guo
16:180:567. (S) ANALYSIS OF RECEIVING WATER QUALITY (3) Guo
16:180:568. (S) THERMAL EFFECTS ON RECEIVING WATERS (3) Modes of heat transfer, energy equation; heat balance in well-mixed water bodies; heat exchange between atmosphere and water body; temperature dynamics in well-mixed bodies; thermal stratification in streams and reservoirs; heat dispersion; thermal jets and plumes; cooling ponds; temperature effects on water quality parameters.
16:180:574. (S) GROUNDWATER ENGINEERING (3) Lee
16:180:586. (S) ADVANCED FLUID MECHANICS (3) Basic laws and equations of fluid flows; exact and approximate solutions; potential flows; boundary layer flows; turbulent flows in pipes and open channels; free turbulent jets and wakes; turbulence and transport phenomena; transient flows.
16:180:588. (S) THEORY OF HYDRAULIC MODELS (3) Geometric, kinematic, and dynamic similarity between prototype and models. Similarity laws; Model techniques; undistorted and distorted models; models for hydraulic structures, free-surface flows, flows over erodible beds, and hydraulic machinery. Environmental applications.
16:180:590. (S) COASTAL ENGINEERING (3) Guo |
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