The Erasmus Mundus Program

European educational initiatives in fusion aim to maintain the expertise that has placed the EU fusion program at the forefront of international fusion research and engineering and to ensure the availability of competent staff to construct and operate ITER and DEMO.

There are two pillars to the European strategy: the Erasmus Mundus European Master of Science in Nuclear Fusion and Engineering Physics (FUSION-EP) and the Erasmus Mundus International Doctoral College in Fusion Science and Engineering (FUSION-DC).

The two-year FUSION-EP program is organized in two periods of increasing specialization, each in two different countries, along two distinct tracks: Fusion Sciences and Fusion Technology. Teaching and research activities are coordinated among eight partner universities, and 25 EU and non-EU academic and research associate partners, including ITER. Its aim is to provide a high-level multinational research-oriented education in fusion-related engineering or physics in close relation to the research activities of the partners, together with a well-integrated language and cultural experience.

The eight core partner universities are: Aix-Marseille Université (AMU, France, responsible for coordination); the Institut National des Sciences & Techniques Nucléaires (INSTN, France); Ghent University (Belgium); the Czech Technical University (Czech Republic); Université de Lorraine (France); Universität Stuttgart (Germany); Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (Spain); Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain). 

The course language is English. Students from all over the world can apply. Click here for further information. 

FUSION-DC is a three-year joint doctoral program in nuclear fusion science and engineering offered by a consortium of 19 European partner institutions from 8 EU countries (8 full partners and 11 associated), the ITER Organization, and 9 associated partners from China, Japan, Russia, and the USA. FUSION-DC provides a sustainable, integrated and coordinated education at the doctoral level in the framework of a worldwide network of excellence in magnetic confinement fusion.

The program focuses on a number of research fields that address the major remaining challenges for making fusion energy a reality, with an emphasis on next-step devices (ITER, W7-X, DEMO) and reactor aspects. It offers an attractive variety of educational and training activities (including a yearly PhD summer event) and an unparalleled diversity of research opportunities at partner institutions and research facilities. 

The course language is English. Click here for further information.

See a full list of study programs in Europe on the FuseNet site (FuseNet is the European Fusion Education Network.)