Electrical Engineering
Showing 1-20 of 70 Results
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Atul Arvind Salvekar
Affiliate, Program-Mitra, S.
BioI received a PhD and 2 MS degrees at Stanford (advisor John Cioffi) in 2002 following my BS at Caltech 1992-1996.
I'll be an research affiliate working with Professor Subhasish Mitra and John Cioffi through July, 2026.
I worked in a variety of capacities spanning chipsets to end-user products / AI systems. My areas of interest are AI, algorithms, signal processing, and their intersection with the physical world.
After 25 years of industry, it is exciting to be back on the farm. Thank you Professors Mitra and Cioffi for making this possible. -
Krishna Saraswat
Rickey/Nielsen Professor in the School of Engineering, Emeritus
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsNew and innovative materials, structures, and process technology of semiconductor devices, interconnects for nanoelectronics and solar cells.
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Dustin Schroeder
Associate Professor of Geophysics, of Electrical Engineering and Senior Fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment
BioMy research focuses on advancing the scientific and technical foundations of geophysical ice penetrating radar and its use in observing and understanding the interaction of ice and water in the solar system. I am primarily interested in the subglacial and englacial conditions of rapidly changing ice sheets and their contribution to global sea level rise. However, a growing secondary focus of my work is the exploration of icy moons. I am also interested in the development and application of science-optimized geophysical radar systems. I consider myself a radio glaciologist and strive to approach problems from both an earth system science and a radar system engineering perspective. I am actively engaged with the flow of information through each step of the observational science process; from instrument and experiment design, through data processing and analysis, to modeling and inference. This allows me to draw from a multidisciplinary set of tools to test system-scale and process-level hypotheses. For me, this deliberate integration of science and engineering is the most powerful and satisfying way to approach questions in Earth and planetary science.