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Stochastic Neutron Noise Estimation Using a Rare-Event Simulation Approach. Application to the Monitorin


Thesis topic details

General information

Organisation

The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.

Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.

The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
  

Reference

SL-DRF-26-0196  

Direction

DRF

Thesis topic details

Category

Corpuscular physics and outer space

Thesis topics

Stochastic Neutron Noise Estimation Using a Rare-Event Simulation Approach. Application to the Monitoring of Nuclear System Reactivity

Contract

Thèse

Job description

This PhD project aims to develop an innovative method to characterize the reactivity of fissile systems by analyzing their stochastic fluctuations, known as zero-power neutron noise. In a subcritical fissile medium, neutrons originating from spontaneous fission can initiate short and random chain reactions, generating a fluctuating signal. This noise carries essential information on the distance of the system to criticality, a key parameter both for the safety of nuclear installations (prevention of criticality accidents) and for the detection of undeclared fissile materials (nuclear security and non-proliferation).

Existing theoretical approaches to infer system reactivity from neutron noise are limited to idealized situations and become unsuitable in realistic configurations, particularly when the system is strongly subcritical or when significant uncertainties exist regarding its geometry or composition (as in the case of the Fukushima Daiichi corium or spent fuel storage). Monte Carlo simulations then appear as a natural alternative, but current simulations rely on variance reduction techniques that fail to correctly preserve stochastic fluctuations.

This thesis proposes to address this scientific challenge by adapting a relatively recent variance reduction method known as Adaptive Multilevel Splitting (AMS), originally developed to efficiently sample rare events while preserving their statistical properties. The goal is to extend this method to neutron transport in multiplying media and to make it a tool capable of faithfully simulating the temporal correlations characteristic of neutron noise. Following the theoretical developments, the algorithm will be implemented in Geant4, compared to analytical benchmark solutions, and experimentally validated through in situ measurements (using neutron sources or research reactors). In the long term, this work may lead to direct applications in nuclear monitoring, safety diagnostics, and detector physics, while also opening perspectives in fundamental physics and medical physics.

University / doctoral school

PHENIICS (PHENIICS)
Paris-Saclay

Thesis topic location

Site

Saclay

Requester

Position start date

01/09/2026

Person to be contacted by the applicant

DUMONTEIL Eric eric.dumonteil@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRFU/DPhN
CEA Saclay
DRF/IRFU/DPHN
Orme des merisiers Bat 703
91191 Gif-sur-Yvette CEDEX

01 69 08 57 79

Tutor / Responsible thesis director

DUMONTEIL Eric eric.dumonteil@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRFU/DPhN
CEA Saclay
DRF/IRFU/DPHN
Orme des merisiers Bat 703
91191 Gif-sur-Yvette CEDEX

01 69 08 57 79

En savoir plus

http://eric.dumonteil.free.fr/
https://irfu.cea.fr/dphn/