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Professor Mohammad Taghi Rouhani Rankoohi
Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Shahid Beheshti University
Tehran, Iran
Sunday, April 20, 2008
تقریباً همزمان با شصت ویکمین سالروز تولد استاد برای دیدن ایشان و تبریک سالروز تولدشان بعد از مدتها به دانشگاه شهید بهشتی رفتم و این یکی از عکسهایی است که در این ملاقات گرفتم.
استاد محمدتقی روحانی رانکوهی
دانشکده مهندسی برق و کامپیوتر
دانشگاه شهيد بهشتی
تهران، ایران
یکشنبه اول اردیبهشت 1387
تمام حقوق محفوظ است ©
Christopher B. Roberts and Joseph Cowan, electrical and computer engineering (Outstanding Alumni recipient)
Anisha Aggarwal, an undergraduate in the Computer Science and Engineering Department takes part in the Women in Electrical and Computer Engineering (WECE) Breadboarding 101 Workshop in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan on Tuesday evening, February 15, 2022. The workshop was lead by Enakshi Deb, and Hannah Parrish, both students in the ECE Department.
The Women in Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Michigan began in 2020 with a conversation between Enakshi Deb (the current president) and Isha Bhatt (former president). In 2022 the group was able to meet in person for the first time.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Gabor Temes, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Oregon State University. (Photo by Herma Ornes)
Geraldina Interiano-Wise, UH Cullen College of Engineering Artist-in-Residence, performs a live art-neuroscience production of The Nahual Project at the Moody Center at Rice University Tuesday, April 20, 2021. A component of the Creativity Up Close series, the event was a collaboration of Dr. Jose Contreras-Vidal (UH) and Dr. Anthony Brandt (Rice).
Pictured (l. to r.) are Dr. Mohammadreza Ghahremani, assistant professor of computer engineering, Outstanding Faculty Award in Research; Dr. Amy DeWitt, associate professor of sociology, Outstanding Faculty Award in Service; Dr. Scott Beard, provost; Dr. Stacey Kendig, chair of the Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Sport, Outstanding Faculty Award for Advising; and Dr. Jordan Mader, associate professor of chemistry, Outstanding Faculty Award for Teaching.
From left, James Kelly and Miles Joseph Hanbury, gather together before the College of Engineering Commencement Ceremony at the Crisler Center at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Saturday, April 29, 2023.
At commencement Kelly was awarded his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science and Hanbury was awarded his bachelor’s in computer engineering with a minor in physics.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Electrical and Computer Engineering graduates in the Walter Scott Jr. College of Engineering, before the 2023 Spring Commencement. May 14, 2023
Cody Dempster, a master’s student in electrical and computer engineering, left, and Parth Raut, a master’s student in computer science and engineering, right, help Michaela Garvey, a graduate student in space engineering, as she prepares for another test run of the Supermileage vehicle in the parking lot across from the Ford Motor Company Robotics Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Saturday, April 8, 2023. Dempter is the Electric Motor Co-Lead, Raut is on the Electric Motor Subteam, and Garvey is the Project Manager.
This year the Supermileage team has more than 30 members from ten different majors. They designed two vehicles this season, the Maple and the Magnolia. One is a internal combustion engine vehicle for the urban concept category, with a goal of 500 miles per gallon, the other is for the electric prototype category with a target efficiency of 10,000 miles per gallon.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Photograph by Brett Carlsen
Chaquan Smith - Computer engineering technology '16 - gets a pie to the face after visitors successfully through a football through a hoop for the football club. Imagine RIT Innovation and Creativity Festival 2013.
Henrietta, New York
5/4/13
David Klotzkin, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Binghamton University, and his colleague, Ian Papautsky, director of the University of Cincinnati’s BioMicrosystems Lab and its Micro/Nano Fabrication Engineering Research Center, have developed a technology to accelerate blood tests and look to enhance them in a number of other ways.
Klotzkin is an expert on the properties of light. Much of his research has focused intensely on photonics — the science of photons, elementary light particles — since he earned his PhD in electrical engineering at the University of Michigan.
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Engineering Building IV (far right) begins to take shape on Centennial Campus. Photos by Becky Kirkland.
Somin Eunice Lee, Assistant Professor at Electrical & Computer Engineering and
Biomedical Engineering Departments at the University of Michigan leads the Bioplasmonics Group that focuses on the creation of novel photonic devices and nanoscopies to visualize biological and chemical processes with nanometer resolution over time.
Lee and her graduate students at the University of Michigan developed a way of seeing nanoscale biological structures that doesn’t rely on using fluorescent molecules that break down the more you use them to look at whatever it is you’re trying to see.
Her group’s technique looked at a fraction of the light coming back from the network of actin molecules in a dividing cell, choosing only to look at light waves that were in a certain part of their oscillation when they arrive at the detector (peak, trough, somewhere in between - this is known as the phase of the light).
Each of these partial snapshots reveals a random scattering of points on the actin network. By taking multiple snapshots together, they can reconstruct nanoscale details that are smaller than the wavelength of light - and which can’t be seen with ordinary microscopes.
NCRC facility on University of Michigan’s North Campus. Wednesday, Feb 15, 2023.
Photo courtesy of Somin Lee
A student shakes hands with Dennis Sylvester, the Edward S. Davidson Collegiate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Senior Associate Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering, as he crosses the stage at the College of Engineering Commencement Ceremony at the Crisler Center at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Saturday, April 29, 2023.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Andreina Granados, Xing Jin, and Majd Barchini (left to right) conduct tests on a new optical tomography system as two visiting scholars are working in the EECE department this semester in the new optical tomography system that Dr. Salehi purchased as part of his NSF Major Research Instrumentation grant on Tuesday, January 28, 2020 in Chico, Calif.
(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)
Amy LaViers, graduate student in Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE), is working on a project involving an "automaton" robotic dance.
The NEES Equipment Site at the University of Nevada, Reno is a multiple-shake-table facility (with three identical biaxial and one six degree-of-freedom shake-tables) that is suitable for conducting research on long, spatially distributed, structural and geotechnical systems. The facility is operational and managed as a national shared-use NEES equipment site, with teleparticipation capabilities, to provide new earthquake engineering research testing capabilities for large structural systems through 2014.
The James B. Hunt, Jr. Library takes shape on NC State University's Centennial Campus. Photo by Becky Kirkland.
The NEES Equipment Site at the University of Nevada, Reno is a multiple-shake-table facility (with three identical biaxial and one six degree-of-freedom shake-tables) that is suitable for conducting research on long, spatially distributed, structural and geotechnical systems. The facility is operational and managed as a national shared-use NEES equipment site, with teleparticipation capabilities, to provide new earthquake engineering research testing capabilities for large structural systems through 2014.
Study lead author Carlos Gerardo, a PhD candidate in electrical and computer engineering at UBC.
Photo credit: Clare Kiernan/UBC
Gage Glupker and Karthik Urs, Computer Engineering BSE Students, work on designing circuits using a small particle accelerator in the Space Research Building on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on August 11, 2016.
Photo: Joseph Xu, Michigan Engineering Communications & Marketing
A new array of brain sensors can record electrical signals directly from the surface of the human brain in record-breaking detail. The new brain sensors feature densely packed grids of either 1,024 or 2,048 embedded electrocorticography (ECoG) sensors. They are more flexible and 100 times thinner than the ECoG grids used in the clinic. If approved for clinical use, these new sensors would offer neurosurgeons brain-signal information directly from the surface of the brain's cortex in 100 times higher resolution than what is available today.
A team led by electrical engineers at the University of California San Diego reported the new brain sensors in a paper published by the journal Science Translational Medicine.
Full story: jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/release/3393
Credit: David Baillot / UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering
In the fall of 2016 the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering opened its new Innovation Lab, also known as “The Garage,” a makerspace that gives majors 24-7 access to the necessary tools for circuit design and development. More photos here.
Pascale Fung, Chair Professor, Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR, Chinaa and Bertram Shi, Professor, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong SAR, China speaking in the Hacking Machines for Humanity with Hong Kong University of Science and Technology session at the at the Annual Meeting of the New Champions 2023 in Tianjin, People's Republic of China, 27 June 2023. Tianjin Meijiang Convention Center - Betazone. Copyright: World Economic Forum/Faruk Pinjo
On Sept. 9, 2022, the Elmore Family School of Electrical and Computer Engineering celebrated the naming of the Max W and Maileen Brown Family Hall of Electrical Engineering. We thank alumnus Max W Brown , his wife Maileen, and their children Max G and Ash for their support of our School!
Mingyan Liu, Peter and Evelyn Fuss Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering, chats with other faculty at a reception hosted by the ADVANCE Program and the Dean's Advisory Committee on Female Faculty (DACFF) celebrating women in leadership positions in the College of Engineering at the Ford Library on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 5, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing