Samir El-Ghazaly
Department of Electrical Engineering Telecommunications Research Center Arizona State University P.O. Box 877206 Tempe, Arizona 85287-7206
Biography Samir M. El-Ghazaly received the Ph.D. degree, in Electrical Engineering, in 1988 from the University of Texas at Austin. In August 1988, he joined Arizona State University , where he is now a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering. He visited and worked at several universities and research centers including Cairo University; the Centre Hyperfrequences et Semiconducteurs at Université de Lille I in France; University of Ottawa in Canada; the University of Texas at Austin; NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, California; CST-Motorola, Inc., Tempe, Arizona; iemn, Université de Lille, France; and the Swiss Federal Research Institute (ETH). His research interests include RF and Microwave circuits and components; microwave and millimeter-wave semiconductor devices, semiconductor device simulations, ultra-short pulse propagation, microwave-optical interactions; linear and nonlinear modeling of superconductor microwave lines, wave-device interactions, electromagnetics, and numerical techniques applied to monolithic microwave integrated circuits. Dr. El-Ghazaly is a Fellow of IEEE, an elected member of Commissions A and D of URSI, a member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and Eta Kappa Nu. He was the secretary and the vice-chairman, and currently is the chairman of Commission A of the US National Committee of URSI. He is a member of the Technical Program Committee for the IEEE International Microwave Symposium since 1991, and on the editorial board of the IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques. He was the chairman of the IEEE-Waves and Devices Group, Phoenix Section. He was the chapter funding coordinator and the chairman of the Chapter Activities Committee of the IEEE MTT Society. He is an elected member of the Administrative Committee (AdCom) of the IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques Society. He is the Editor-in-Chief for the IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters. He was the general chairman of the IEEE MTT-S 2001 International Microwave Symposium, which was held in Phoenix, Arizona, May 2001.
Samir M. El-Ghazaly received the Ph.D. degree, in Electrical Engineering, in 1988 from the University of Texas at Austin. In August 1988, he joined Arizona State University , where he is now a Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering. He visited and worked at several universities and research centers including Cairo University; the Centre Hyperfrequences et Semiconducteurs at Université de Lille I in France; University of Ottawa in Canada; the University of Texas at Austin; NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, California; CST-Motorola, Inc., Tempe, Arizona; iemn, Université de Lille, France; and the Swiss Federal Research Institute (ETH). His research interests include RF and Microwave circuits and components; microwave and millimeter-wave semiconductor devices, semiconductor device simulations, ultra-short pulse propagation, microwave-optical interactions; linear and nonlinear modeling of superconductor microwave lines, wave-device interactions, electromagnetics, and numerical techniques applied to monolithic microwave integrated circuits. Dr. El-Ghazaly is a Fellow of IEEE, an elected member of Commissions A and D of URSI, a member of Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Xi, and Eta Kappa Nu. He was the secretary and the vice-chairman, and currently is the chairman of Commission A of the US National Committee of URSI. He is a member of the Technical Program Committee for the IEEE International Microwave Symposium since 1991, and on the editorial board of the IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques. He was the chairman of the IEEE-Waves and Devices Group, Phoenix Section. He was the chapter funding coordinator and the chairman of the Chapter Activities Committee of the IEEE MTT Society. He is an elected member of the Administrative Committee (AdCom) of the IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques Society. He is the Editor-in-Chief for the IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters. He was the general chairman of the IEEE MTT-S 2001 International Microwave Symposium, which was held in Phoenix, Arizona, May 2001.
Arizona State University Department of Electrical Engineering Telecommunications Research Center
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