Anomalies in flesh detected from 30cm away
Kurzweil Network - 09-Nov-2015Microwaves heat up flesh-like material by only 1/1000th of a degree. Ultrasound pressure waves g...
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Associate Professor at Stanford University.
Amin Arbabian received his Ph.D. degree in EECS from UC Berkeley in 2011 and in 2012 joined Stanford University, as an Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering. His current research interests include mm-wave and high-frequency circuits and systems, imaging technologies, Internet-of-Everything devices including wireless power delivery techniques, and medical implants. Prof. Arbabian currently serves on the steering committee of RFIC, the technical program committees of RFIC and ESSCIRC, and as associate editor of the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Letters (SSC-L) and the IEEE Journal of Electromagnetics, RF and Microwaves in Medicine and Biology (J-ERM). He is the recipient or co-recipient of the 2016 Stanford University Tau Beta Pi Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, 2015 NSF CAREER award, 2014 DARPA Young Faculty Award (YFA) including the Director’s Fellowship in 2016, 2013 Hellman faculty scholarship, and best paper awards from several conferences including ISSCC (2010), VLSI Circuits (2014), RFIC symposium (2008 and 2011, 2nd place), ICUWB (2013), PIERS (2015), MTT-S BioWireless symposium (2016), and BioCAS (2017).
Visit website: https://arbabianlab.stanford.edu/
See also: Stanford University - Private research university, one of the world's leading research and teaching institutions
Details last updated 18-Sep-2020
Microwaves heat up flesh-like material by only 1/1000th of a degree. Ultrasound pressure waves g...
A Stanford engineering team has built a radio the size of an ant, a device so energy efficient th...