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Dr. Amir Zaghloul and Ph.D. student Minh Nguyen awarded "Best Paper" at the 23rd IEEE Digital Avionics Systems Conference. |
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Dr. Yue (Joseph) Wang in his office at ARI |
Wishing you and your family a holiday season filled with health, hope and happiness... |
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ARI Professor Selected as Associate Editor of IEEE Signal
Processing Letters
The Signal Processing Society (SPS) of the Institute for Electrical & Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has selected Dr. Yue Wang, associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, to serve as an associate editor for the IEEE Signal Processing Letters. This is a monthly journal designed to provide rapid publication of original, timely and significant contributions in signal, image, speech and audio processing. Dr. Wang currently serves as a member of the Technical Committee on Bio Imaging and Signal Processing (BISP) of the SPS, which promotes activities within the broad technical areas of biomedical and biological signal and image processing. The IEEE requires peer review of all papers that appear in transactions, journals and letters publications. As an Associate Editor, Dr. Wang will be responsible for identifying quality manuscripts as well as efficiently managing the peer review process. His efforts will help IEEE maintain their reputation for distributing quality publications. Dr. Wang's two-year term commences December 1, 2004. The mission of the IEEE is to promote the engineering process of creating, developing, integrating, sharing, and applying knowledge about electro and information technologies and sciences for the benefit of humanity and the profession. For more information on this organization, please visit: www.ieee.org For more information, please contact Yue Wang. |
ARI Professor Registers New Invention Dr. Amir Zaghloul, a professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Dr. C. Babu Ravipati of Applied Electromagnetics, Inc. have recently registered the invention of a Dual-Band Hybrid Antenna Element with Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties, Disclosure Number 04-076. This invention describes an antenna that operates independently at two different frequency bands, and at two different sets of polarizations. The element is a hybrid of printed circuit and waveguide elements. The lower frequency uses the printed circuit element in a non-surface-wave-generating environment, and uses the shorted annular ring reduced surface wave (referred to as SAR-RSW) concept. The higher frequency uses a circular open-ended waveguide that is embedded inside the annular ring. The hybrid element can be used in communication systems that require two frequency bands of operation in the transmit and/or receive modes. For more information, please contact Amir Zaghloul.
Proposed Dual-Band Hybrid Antenna Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties, Inc. was established in 1985 as a university affiliated, non-profit, private corporation. VTIP handles, protects and licenses technologies developed by the faculty, staff and students at Virginia Tech.
VTIP
is located in Blacksburg, Virginia.
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Faculty/Student Team Awarded "Best Paper" at Conference Ph.D. student Minh Nguyen and ARI faculty member Dr. Amir Zaghloul were recently awarded "Best Paper" in the CNS Networks Track at the 23rd IEEE Digital Avionics Systems Conference (DASC) in Salt Lake City, Utah, October 2004. The paper is entitled "Extension on Characterizing Packet Interference in a High-Density Traffic Environment." For more information, please contact Amir Zaghloul. |
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Virginia Tech's Alexandria Research Institute 206 N. Washington St.
Suite 400 Copyright ARI 2004 |
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