University of Texas
ECE

Course List - Fall 2009

* Click on "show" in the course heading to display course description and prerequiste

EE 302: INTRO ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING

The scope and nature of professional activities of electrical and computer engineers, including problem-solving techniques, analysis, and design methods; using computers for communication and problem-solving tasks; engineering professional ethics; analysis of analog resistive circuits, including Thevenin/Norton equivalent, mesh analysis, and nodal analysis; representation of signals and systems; information processing; state machines. Three lecture hours and two laboratory hours a week for one semester. Electrical Engineering 302 and 302H may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Mathematics 408C or 408K.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16170 Syllabus Books TTH
M
09:30AM-11:00AM
09:00AM-11:00AM
ENS 115
ACA 1.108
Neal, Howard
16175 Syllabus Books TTH
W
09:30AM-11:00AM
11:00AM-01:00PM
ENS 115
ACA 1.108
Neal, Howard
16180 Syllabus Books TTH
F
09:30AM-11:00AM
11:00AM-01:00PM
ENS 115
ACA 1.108
Neal, Howard
16185 Syllabus Books MWF
T
10:00AM-11:00AM
01:00PM-03:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
McCann, Robert
16190 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
10:00AM-11:00AM
01:00PM-03:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
McCann, Robert
16195 Syllabus Books MWF
F
10:00AM-11:00AM
01:00PM-03:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
McCann, Robert
16200 Syllabus Books MWF
T
11:00AM-12:00PM
11:00AM-01:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16205 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
11:00AM-12:00PM
11:00AM-01:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16210 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
11:00AM-12:00PM
03:00PM-05:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16215 Syllabus Books MWF
W
01:00PM-02:00PM
09:00AM-11:00AM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16220 Syllabus Books MWF
F
01:00PM-02:00PM
09:00AM-11:00AM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16225 Syllabus Books MWF
T
01:00PM-02:00PM
03:00PM-05:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16226 Syllabus Books MWF
F
01:00PM-02:00PM
03:00PM-05:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.108
Telang, Nina
16230 Syllabus Books MWF
T
02:00PM-03:00PM
09:00AM-11:00AM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Cardwell, George
16235 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
02:00PM-03:00PM
09:00AM-11:00AM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Cardwell, George
16240 Syllabus Books MWF
M
02:00PM-03:00PM
11:00AM-01:00PM
ENS 127
ACA 1.108
Cardwell, George

EE 306: INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING

Bottom-up introduction to computing; bits and operations on bits; number formats; arithmetic and logic operations; digital logic; the Von Neumann model of processing, including memory, arithmetic logic unit, registers, and instruction decoding and execution; introduction to structured programming and debugging; machine and assembly language programming; the structure of an assembler; physical input/output through device registers; subroutine call/return; trap instruction; stacks and applications of stacks. Three lecture hours and one recitation hour a week for one semester. Electrical Engineering 306 and 379K (Topic: Introduction to Computing) may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Mathematics 408C or 408K.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16245 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
09:00AM-10:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 115
Patt, Yale
16250 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
09:00AM-10:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 116
Patt, Yale
16255 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
09:00AM-10:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 126
Patt, Yale
16260 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 145
Patt, Yale
16265 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 115
Patt, Yale
16270 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 126
Patt, Yale
16275 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
WEL 2.224
ENS 306
Patt, Yale
16280 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
11:00AM-12:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 116
Patt, Yale
16285 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
11:00AM-12:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 126
Patt, Yale
16290 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:00PM-01:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 306
Patt, Yale
16295 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:00PM-01:00PM
WEL 2.224
RLM 7.116
Patt, Yale
16300 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
01:00PM-02:00PM
WEL 2.224
ETC 2.132
Patt, Yale
16305 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
01:00PM-02:00PM
WEL 2.224
RLM 5.120
Patt, Yale
16310 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
01:00PM-02:00PM
WEL 2.224
RLM 6.118
Patt, Yale
16315 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
02:00PM-03:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 109
Patt, Yale
16320 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
02:00PM-03:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 116
Patt, Yale
16325 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
02:00PM-03:00PM
WEL 2.224
RLM 6.126
Patt, Yale
16330 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
03:00PM-04:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 109
Patt, Yale
16335 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:30PM-05:00PM
03:00PM-04:00PM
WEL 2.224
ENS 116
Patt, Yale

EE 309S: DEVEL OF SOLAR-POWERED VEHICLE

No course description found.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16340 Syllabus Books MW
TH
05:00PM-06:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 109
ENS 220
Hallock, Gary

EE 411: CIRCUIT THEORY

Linear circuit elements; nodal and mesh analysis; operational amplifiers; capacitance and inductance; simple transient response; sinusoidal steady state analysis; Bode plots; three-phase circuits; transformers; two-port networks (Z-parameters and Y-parameters); computer-aided analysis and design. Three lecture hours and two recitation hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 302 or 302H with a grade of at least C; credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Mathematics 427K; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Physics 303L and 103N.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16345 Syllabus Books MWF
W
11:00AM-12:00PM
01:00PM-03:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 109
Grady, William
16350 Syllabus Books MWF
F
11:00AM-12:00PM
02:00PM-04:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 115
Grady, William
16355 Syllabus Books TTH
F
12:30PM-02:00PM
12:00PM-02:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 126
Kwasinski, Alexis
16360 Syllabus Books TTH
M
12:30PM-02:00PM
03:00PM-05:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 109
Kwasinski, Alexis
16365 Syllabus Books TTH
M
03:30PM-05:00PM
01:00PM-03:00PM
ENS 127
ENS 109
Arapostathis, Aristotle
16370 Syllabus Books TTH
W
03:30PM-05:00PM
03:00PM-05:00PM
ENS 127
ENS 109
Arapostathis, Aristotle

EE 312: INTRODUCTION TO PROGRAMMING

Programming skills for problem solving; programming in C; elementary data structures; asymptotic analysis. Three lecture hours and one recitation hour a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 306 or Biomedical Engineering 303 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16375 Syllabus Books MWF
M
09:00AM-10:00AM
12:00PM-01:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 109
Krasner, Herb
16380 Syllabus Books MWF
F
09:00AM-10:00AM
01:00PM-02:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 109
Krasner, Herb
16390 Syllabus Books TTH
F
02:00PM-03:30PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
CPE 2.212
ENS 116
Chase, Craig
16395 Syllabus Books TTH
W
02:00PM-03:30PM
12:00PM-01:00PM
CPE 2.212
ENS 109
Chase, Craig
16400 Syllabus Books TTH
F
02:00PM-03:30PM
02:00PM-03:00PM
CPE 2.212
ENS 126
Chase, Craig

EE 313: LINEAR SYSTEMS AND SIGNALS

Representation of signals and systems; system properties; sampling; Laplace and z-transforms; transfer functions and frequency response; convolution; stability; Fourier series; Fourier transform; AM/FM modulation; applications. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 411, 331, or Biomedical Engineering 311 with a grade of at least C; and Mathematics 427K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16405 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 127 Powers, Edward
16410 Syllabus Books MW 03:00PM-04:30PM ENS 127 Andrews, Jeffrey

EE 316: DIGITAL LOGIC DESIGN

Boolean algebra; analysis and synthesis of combinational and sequential switching networks; applications to computer design. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 306 or Computer Sciences 307 with a grade of at least C; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 312 or Computer Sciences 310.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16415 Syllabus Books MWF 12:00PM-01:00PM ACA 1.104 Aziz, Adnan
16420 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ACA 1.104 Yerraballi, Ramesh
16425 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM WEL 2.312 Touba, Nur

EE 316: LABORATORY

Boolean algebra; analysis and synthesis of combinational and sequential switching networks; applications to computer design. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 306 or Computer Sciences 307 with a grade of at least C; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 312 or Computer Sciences 310.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16430 Syllabus Books T 09:30AM-10:30AM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16435 Syllabus Books M 10:00AM-11:00AM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16440 Syllabus Books W 11:00AM-12:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16445 Syllabus Books TH 11:00AM-12:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16450 Syllabus Books T 12:30PM-01:30PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16455 Syllabus Books M 01:00PM-02:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16460 Syllabus Books W 02:00PM-03:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16465 Syllabus Books TH 02:00PM-03:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16470 Syllabus Books M 03:00PM-04:00PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur
16475 Syllabus Books T 03:30PM-04:30PM ENS 10 Touba, Nur

EE 319K: INTRO TO EMBEDDED SYSTEMS

Basic computer structure; instruction set; addressing modes; assembly language programming; subroutines; arithmetic operations; programming in C; C functions; basic data structures; input/output; and survey of several microcontrollers. Three lecture hours and one laboratory hour a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 306 or Biomedical Engineering 303 with a grade of at least C, and Electrical Engineering 312 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16480 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
10:00AM-11:00AM
01:00PM-02:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Valvano, Jonathan
16485 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
10:00AM-11:00AM
02:00PM-03:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Valvano, Jonathan
16490 Syllabus Books MWF
TH
10:00AM-11:00AM
03:00PM-04:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Valvano, Jonathan
16495 Syllabus Books TTH
W
02:00PM-03:30PM
02:00PM-03:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh
16500 Syllabus Books TTH
W
02:00PM-03:30PM
03:00PM-04:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh
16505 Syllabus Books TTH
W
02:00PM-03:30PM
04:00PM-05:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh
16510 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:00PM-04:30PM
10:00AM-11:00AM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh
16515 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:00PM-04:30PM
11:00AM-12:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh
16520 Syllabus Books MW
F
03:00PM-04:30PM
12:00PM-01:00PM
ACA 1.104
ACA 1.106
Yerraballi, Ramesh

EE 322C: DATA STRUCTURES

Programming with abstractions; data structures; algorithm analysis. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 312 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16525 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 126 Garg, Vijay
16530 Syllabus Books MW 03:30PM-05:00PM BUR 112 Nettles, Scott
16535 Syllabus Books MW 05:00PM-06:30PM ACA 1.104 Khurshid, Sarfraz

EE 325: ELECTROMAGNETIC ENGINEERING

Introduction to electrostatics and magnetostatics; properties of conductive, dielectric, and magnetic materials; solutions of Maxwell's equations; uniform plane wave applications; frequency- and time-domain analyses of transmission lines. Prerequisite: Physics 303L and 103N and Mathematics 427K with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16540 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ECJ 1.204 Driga, Mircea
16545 Syllabus Books MW 03:00PM-04:30PM BUR 116 Ling, Hao
16550 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 126 Yilmaz, Ali

EE 325K: ANTENNAS AND WIRELESS PROPGATN

Solutions of time-varying Maxwell's equations with applications to antennas and wireless propagation; antenna theory and design, array synthesis; electromagnetic wave propagation, scattering, and diffraction; numerical methods for solving Maxwell's equations. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 325 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16555 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 109 Yilmaz, Ali

EE 325LX: COOPERATIVE ENGINEERING

This course covers the work period of electrical and computer engineering students in the Cooperative Engineering Program. Forty laboratory hours a week for three semesters. The student must complete Electrical Engineering 325LX, 325LY, and 325LZ before a grade and degree credit are awarded. Prerequisite: For 325LX, application to become a member of the Cooperative Engineering Program, approval of the dean, and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LY, Electrical Engineering 325LX and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LZ, Electrical Engineering 325LY and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16560 Syllabus Books      

EE 325LY: COOPERATIVE ENGINEERING

This course covers the work period of electrical and computer engineering students in the Cooperative Engineering Program. Forty laboratory hours a week for three semesters. The student must complete Electrical Engineering 325LX, 325LY, and 325LZ before a grade and degree credit are awarded. Prerequisite: For 325LX, application to become a member of the Cooperative Engineering Program, approval of the dean, and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LY, Electrical Engineering 325LX and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LZ, Electrical Engineering 325LY and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16565 Syllabus Books      

EE 325LZ: COOPERATIVE ENGINEERING

This course covers the work period of electrical and computer engineering students in the Cooperative Engineering Program. Forty laboratory hours a week for three semesters. The student must complete Electrical Engineering 325LX, 325LY, and 325LZ before a grade and degree credit are awarded. Prerequisite: For 325LX, application to become a member of the Cooperative Engineering Program, approval of the dean, and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LY, Electrical Engineering 325LX and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 325LZ, Electrical Engineering 325LY and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16570 Syllabus Books      

EE 225MA: COOPERATIVE ENGINEERING

This course covers the work period of electrical engineering students in the Cooperative Engineering Program. Forty laboratory hours a week for two semesters. The student must complete Electrical Engineering 225MA and 225MB before a grade and degree credit are awarded. Prerequisite: For 225MA, application to become a member of the Cooperative Engineering Program, approval of the dean, and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 225MB, Electrical Engineering 225MA and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16575 Syllabus Books      

EE 225MB: COOPERATIVE ENGINEERING

This course covers the work period of electrical engineering students in the Cooperative Engineering Program. Forty laboratory hours a week for two semesters. The student must complete Electrical Engineering 225MA and 225MB before a grade and degree credit are awarded. Prerequisite: For 225MA, application to become a member of the Cooperative Engineering Program, approval of the dean, and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour; for 225MB, Electrical Engineering 225MA and appointment for a full-time cooperative work tour.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16580 Syllabus Books      

EE 125S: INTERNSHIP IN ELEC & COMP ENGR

Practical work experience in industry or a research lab under the supervision of an engineer or scientist. Requires a substantial final report. At least ten hours of work a week, for a total of 150 hours a semester or summer session. May be repeated for credit, but only three hours may be counted toward an electrical engineering degree. Prerequisite: Consent of the undergraduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16585 Syllabus Books      

EE 331: ELEC CIRC, ELECTRONICS, & MACH

Not open to electrical engineering majors. Brief theory of direct and alternating current circuits; single-phase and three-phase power transmission; electronic devices and instrumentation; electromechanics. Prerequisite: Mathematics 408D, Physics 303L, and 103N with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16590 Syllabus Books MWF 12:00PM-01:00PM ENS 127 Cardwell, George
16595 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ACA 1.104 Bostick, Francis

EE 333T: ENGINEERING COMMUNICATION-W

Advanced engineering communication skills, with emphasis on technical documents, oral reports, and graphics; collaborative work involving online communication and research. Prerequisite: English 316K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16600 Syllabus Books MWF 09:00AM-10:00AM ENS 145 Carpenter, Mark
16605 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 145 Fagelson, William
16610 Syllabus Books MWF 11:00AM-12:00PM ENS 109 Carpenter, Mark
16615 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 109 Fagelson, William
16620 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 116 Beer, David
16625 Syllabus Books MWF 01:00PM-02:00PM ENS 145 Carpenter, Mark
16630 Syllabus Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 145 Fagelson, William

EE 438: ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS I

Electronic devices in analog and digital circuits. Device physics and modeling; two-port networks; analysis and design of power supply circuits and amplifiers; frequency response; Bode plots. Laboratory work covers generation and acquisition of test signals; current, voltage, and impedance measurements; transfer function measurement; and spectrum measurements and analysis. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 313 or Biomedical Engineering 343.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16635 Syllabus Books MWF 09:00AM-10:00AM ENS 127 Cardwell, George
16640 Syllabus Books MW 03:00PM-04:30PM ENS 115 Hassibi, Arjang
16645 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 115 Davis, John

EE 438: LABORATORY

Electronic devices in analog and digital circuits. Device physics and modeling; two-port networks; analysis and design of power supply circuits and amplifiers; frequency response; Bode plots. Laboratory work covers generation and acquisition of test signals; current, voltage, and impedance measurements; transfer function measurement; and spectrum measurements and analysis. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 313 or Biomedical Engineering 343.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16650 Syllabus Books W 09:00AM-12:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16655 Syllabus Books TH 09:30AM-12:30PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16660 Syllabus Books M 12:00PM-03:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16665 Syllabus Books W 12:00PM-03:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16670 Syllabus Books W 03:00PM-06:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16675 Syllabus Books F 03:00PM-06:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16680 Syllabus Books M 06:00PM-09:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16685 Syllabus Books W 06:00PM-09:00PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16690 Syllabus Books T 06:30PM-09:30PM ENS 252D Davis, John
16695 Syllabus Books TH 06:30PM-09:30PM ENS 252D Davis, John

EE 338K: ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS II

Feedback principles; Bode plots; analysis and design of circuits with operational amplifiers and oscillators; filters; power amplifiers. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16700 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 127 Bostick, Francis

EE 338L: ANALOG INTEGRATED CIRCUIT DSGN

Analysis and design of analog integrated circuits; transistor models, integrated circuit technologies; layout techniques; mismatches; simple and advanced current mirrors, single-stage amplifiers; differential-pair amplifiers; frequency response; noise considerations; feedback; nonlinear circuits; cascode amplifiers; telescopic and folded-cascode operational amplifiers; two-stage operational amplifiers using state-of-the-art EDA/CAD tools for design simulation and layout. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 and 339 with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16705 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 115 Hassibi, Arjang

EE 339: SOLID-STATE ELECTRONIC DEVICES

Quantum theory of energy levels; semiconductor materials and carrier transport; p-n junctions and Schottky barriers; bipolar and field effect transistors; light-emitting diodes, lasers, and photodetectors. Prerequisite: Mathematics 427K and Physics 303L and 103N with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16710 Syllabus Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 127 Streetman, Ben
16715 Syllabus Books MW 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 116 Tutuc, Emanuel
16720 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 115 Register, L. Frank

EE 345L: MICROPROCESSOR APPLICS AND ORG

Microprocessor organization and interfacing; memory interfacing; hardware-software design of microprocessor systems; applications, including communication systems. Two lecture hours and six laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 319K, 322C, and 438 with a grade of at least C in each; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Aerospace Engineering 333T, Biomedical Engineering 333T, Chemical Engineering 333T, Civil Engineering 333T, Electrical Engineering 333T, Mechanical Engineering 333T, or Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering 333T.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16725 Syllabus Books MWF
MW
02:00PM-03:00PM
09:00AM-10:30AM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16730 Syllabus Books MWF
MW
02:00PM-03:00PM
10:30AM-12:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16735 Syllabus Books MWF
TTH
02:00PM-03:00PM
11:00AM-12:30PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16738 Syllabus Books MWF
MW
02:00PM-03:00PM
03:30PM-05:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16740 Syllabus Books MWF
TTH
02:00PM-03:00PM
03:30PM-05:00PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16745 Syllabus Books MWF
TTH
02:00PM-03:00PM
05:00PM-06:30PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan
16750 Syllabus Books MWF
MW
02:00PM-03:00PM
07:00PM-08:30PM
ACA 1.104
ENS 252C
Valvano, Jonathan

EE 345S: REAL-TIME DIGITAL SIG PROC LAB

Architectures of programmable digital signal processors; programming for real-time performance; design and implementation of digital filters, modulators, data scramblers, pulse shapers, and modems in real time; interfaces to telecommunications systems. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 319K and 438 with a grade of at least C in each; credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Aerospace Engineering 333T, Biomedical Engineering 333T, Chemical Engineering 333T, Civil Engineering 333T, Electrical Engineering 333T, Mechanical Engineering 333T, or Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering 333T; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Biomedical Engineering 335 or Electrical Engineering 351K.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16755 Syllabus Books MWF
F
11:00AM-12:00PM
01:00PM-04:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 252B
Evans, Brian
16760 Syllabus Books MWF
W
11:00AM-12:00PM
03:30PM-06:30PM
ENS 115
ENS 252B
Evans, Brian
16765 Syllabus Books MWF
M
11:00AM-12:00PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 252B
Evans, Brian
16770 Syllabus Books MWF
T
11:00AM-12:00PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 252B
Evans, Brian
16775 Syllabus Books MWF
W
11:00AM-12:00PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 252B
Evans, Brian

EE 348: LASER AND OPTICAL ENGINEERING

Principles of operation and applications of lasers, optical modulators, and optical detectors. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 339 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16780 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 126 Bank, Seth

EE 351K: PROBABILITY & RANDOM PROCESSES

Probability, random variables, statistics, and random processes, including counting, independence, conditioning, expectation, density functions, distributions, law of large numbers, central limit theorem, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, statistical estimation, stationary processes, Markov chains, and ergodicity. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 313 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16790 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ACA 1.104 Arapostathis, Aristotle
16795 Syllabus Books MW 05:00PM-06:30PM CPE 2.208 Powers, Edward

EE 155: ELECTRICAL/COMPUTER ENGR SMNR

Presentations by speakers from industry, government, academia, and professional private practice. Topics include environmental and other ethical concerns, safety awareness, quality management, technical career descriptions, and professionalism. Substantial practice in engineering communication. One lecture hour a week for one semester. Prerequisite: English 316K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16800 Syllabus Books W 12:00PM-01:00PM ECJ 1.202 Ambler, Tony

EE 160: SPEC PROBS IN ELEC & COMP ENGR

Elective course open to upper-division students in electrical engineering for original investigation of special problems approved by the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16805 Syllabus Books      

EE 260: SPEC PROBS IN ELEC & COMP ENGR

Elective course open to upper-division students in electrical engineering for original investigation of special problems approved by the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16810 Syllabus Books      

EE 360: SPEC PROBS IN ELEC & COMP ENGR

Elective course open to upper-division students in electrical engineering for original investigation of special problems approved by the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16815 Syllabus Books      

EE 460: SPEC PROBS IN ELEC & COMP ENGR

Elective course open to upper-division students in electrical engineering for original investigation of special problems approved by the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of three laboratory hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: Consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16820 Syllabus Books      

EE 360C: ALGORITHMS

Complexity analysis; advanced combinatorial algorithms; algorithm design principles; intractability. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 322C with a grade of at least C; and Mathematics 325K or Philosophy 313K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16825 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 115 Ghosh, Joydeep

EE 360F: INTRO TO SOFTWARE ENGINEERING

Introduction to the discipline of software engineering. Fundamentals of evaluating, testing, and verifying software; formal specification; design techniques; software quality assurance and reliability assessment. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 322C with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16830 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 126 Perry, Dewayne

EE 360K: INTRO TO DIGITAL COMMUNICATNS

Communication channels and their impairments; modulation; demodulation; probability-of-error analysis; source coding; error control coding; link budget analysis; equalization; synchronization and multiple access; spread spectrum; applications in wireline and wireless communication systems. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 351K or Biomedical Engineering 335 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16835 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 126 Rappaport, Theodore

EE 360M: DIGITAL SYS DESIGN USING VHDL

Hardware implementation of arithmetic and other algorithmic processes; hardware description languages (VHDL); organization, design, and simulation of digital systems. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 316 and 319K with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16840 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 127 Touba, Nur

EE 360N: COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE

Characteristics of instruction set architecture and microarchitecture; physical and virtual memory; caches and cache design; interrupts and exceptions; integer and floating-point arithmetic; I/O processing; buses; pipelining, out-of-order execution, branch prediction, and other performance enhancements; design trade-offs; case studies of commercial microprocessors. Laboratory work includes completing the behavioral-level design of a microarchitecture. Three lecture hours and one laboratory/recitation hour a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 316 and 319K with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16845 Syllabus Books MW
F
05:00PM-06:30PM
11:00AM-12:30PM
ENS 127
ENS 145
Erez, Mattan
16850 Syllabus Books MW
F
05:00PM-06:30PM
12:30PM-02:00PM
ENS 127
ENS 116
Erez, Mattan
16855 Syllabus Books MW
TH
05:00PM-06:30PM
03:30PM-05:00PM
ENS 127
ENS 306
Erez, Mattan
16860 Syllabus Books MW
TH
05:00PM-06:30PM
05:00PM-06:30PM
ENS 127
RLM 5.112
Erez, Mattan

EE 360R: COMPUTER-AIDED INTEG CIRC DSGN

Theory and practice of integrated circuit design. Classes of chip design, chip partitioning, and architecture; computer-aided design tools for simulation and physical design. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 316, 438 (or 338), and 339 with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16865 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ACA 1.104 Abraham, Jacob

EE 362K: INTRO TO AUTOMATIC CONTROL

Analysis of linear automatic control systems in time and frequency domains; stability analysis; state variable analysis of continuous-time and discrete-time systems; root locus; Nyquist diagrams; Bode plots; sensitivity; lead and lag compensation. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 and Mathematics 340L with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16875 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 116 Brown, David
16880 Syllabus Books MW 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 116 Caramanis, Constantine

EE 362L: POWER ELECTRONICS LABORATORY

Analysis, design, and operation of power electronic circuits; power conversion from AC to DC, DC to DC, and DC to AC; rectifiers, inverters, and pulse width modulated motor drives. Laboratory work focuses on the use of energy from renewable sources such as photovoltaics and wind. Two lecture hours and one and one-half laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 or 331 (or 331K) with a grade of at least C; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Aerospace Engineering 333T, Biomedical Engineering 333T, Chemical Engineering 333T, Civil Engineering 333T, Electrical Engineering 333T, Mechanical Engineering 333T, or Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering 333T.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16885 Syllabus Books MW
TH
02:00PM-03:00PM
09:30AM-11:00AM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
16890 Syllabus Books MW
TH
02:00PM-03:00PM
11:00AM-12:30PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
16895 Syllabus Books MW
F
02:00PM-03:00PM
12:30PM-02:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
16900 Syllabus Books MW
F
02:00PM-03:00PM
02:00PM-03:30PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William

EE 362Q: POWER QUALITY AND HARMONICS

Introduction and analysis of power quality and harmonic phenomena in electric power systems: characteristics and definitions, voltage sags, electrical transients, harmonics, mitigation techniques, standards of power quality and harmonics. The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. Electrical Engineering 362Q and 379K (Topic: Power Quality and Harmonics) may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 or 331 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16905 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 127 Santoso, Surya

EE 362S: DEVEL OF SOLAR-POWERED VEHICLE

No course description found.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16910 Syllabus Books MW
TH
05:00PM-06:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 109
ENS 220
Hallock, Gary

EE 464C: CORPORATE SENIOR DESIGN PROJ-W

Design and experimental projects, done in the laboratories of local companies, for electrical engineering students working full-time in industry; the ethics of design for safety and reliability; emphasis on written and oral reporting of engineering projects. Three lecture hours a week for one semester, with additional laboratory hours to be arranged. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 364D and 366 with a grade of at least C in each; and Electrical Engineering 321K, 440, 345L, 345S, 362L, 371C, 372L, or 374L with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16920 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 220 Becker, Michael

EE 364D: INTRO TO ENGINEERING DESIGN

Introduction to the engineering design process; assessing engineering problems and customer needs; acquiring, documenting, and verifying requirements; high-level system design principles; effects of economic, environmental, ethical, safety, and social issues in design; writing design specifications. Two lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Aerospace Engineering 333T, Biomedical Engineering 333T, Chemical Engineering 333T, Civil Engineering 333T, Electrical Engineering 333T, Mechanical Engineering 333T, or Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering 333T, with a grade of at least C; credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 321K, 440, 345L, 345S, 362L, 371C, 372L, or 374L; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Electrical Engineering 366.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16925 Syllabus Books MW
F
12:00PM-01:00PM
12:00PM-03:00PM
ECJ 1.202
ENS 220
McCann, Robert
16930 Syllabus Books MW
W
12:00PM-01:00PM
03:00PM-06:00PM
ECJ 1.202
ENS 220
McCann, Robert
16935 Syllabus Books MW
W
12:00PM-01:00PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ECJ 1.202
ENS 220
McCann, Robert
16940 Syllabus Books MW
TH
12:00PM-01:00PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ECJ 1.202
ENS 220
McCann, Robert

EE 464H: HONORS SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT-W

Restricted to students in the Engineering Honors Program. Design and experimental projects done under the direction of a University faculty member; the ethics of design for safety and reliability; emphasis on written and oral reporting of engineering projects. Three lecture hours a week for one semester, with additional laboratory hours to be arranged. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 364D and 366 with a grade of at least C in each; Electrical Engineering 321K, 440, 345L, 345S, 362L, 371C, 372L, or 374L with a grade of at least C; and a University grade point average of at least 3.50.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16945 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 220 Becker, Michael
16950 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 220 Becker, Michael
16955 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 220 Becker, Michael

EE 464K: SENIOR DESIGN PROJECT-W

Design and experimental projects done in Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering laboratories; the ethics of design for safety and reliability; emphasis on written and oral reporting of engineering projects. Three lecture hours and six laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 364D and 366 with a grade of at least C in each; and Electrical Engineering 321K, 440, 345L, 345S, 362L, 371C, 372L, or 374L with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
16960 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 205
Becker, Michael
16965 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 207
Becker, Michael
16970 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 212
Becker, Michael
16975 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 214
Becker, Michael
16980 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 252A
Becker, Michael
16985 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 252B
Becker, Michael
16990 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 252C
Becker, Michael
16995 Syllabus Books TTH
TTH
03:30PM-05:00PM
12:30PM-03:30PM
ENS 220
ENS 252D
Becker, Michael

EE 464R: RESEARCH SENIOR DESIGN PROJ-W

Design and experimental projects done under the supervision of a University faculty member; the ethics of design for safety and reliability; emphasis on written and oral reporting of engineering projects. Three lecture hours a week for one semester, with additional laboratory hours to be arranged. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 364D and 366 with a grade of at least C in each; and Electrical Engineering 321K, 440, 345L, 345S, 362L, 371C, 372L, or 374L with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17000 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 220 Becker, Michael

EE 366: ENGINEERING ECONOMICS I

Business organization; discounted cash flow calculations, including present-worth and rate-of-return calculations; replacement analyses; financial analyses; accounting and depreciation; income taxes; inflation; risk analysis, utility theory, decision models, sequential decision making; value of information. Prerequisite: Credit or registration for Electrical Engineering 351K.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17005 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM CPE 2.204 Brown, David
17010 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ACA 1.104 Brown, David

EE 370K: COMPUTER CONTROL SYSTEMS

Analysis and design of linear discrete time control systems; z-transform theory; modified z-transforms; stability; multirate systems; digital simulation of discrete time systems; synthesis of algorithms for computer controllers. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 362K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17020 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM RLM 5.112 Flake, Robert

EE 370N: INTRO TO ROBOTICS/MECHATRONICS

Structures for industrial robots; geometry and transformation; direct and inverse kinematics; differential kinematics; dynamics; trajectory planning; actuators and sensors; adaptive control and learning compliance; vision and pattern recognition; expert systems. Electrical Engineering 370N and 379K (Topic 16: Introduction to Robotics and Mechatronics) may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 362K with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17025 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 306 Driga, Mircea

EE 371C: WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS LAB

The fundamentals of wireless communication from a digital signal processing perspective; linear modulation, demodulation, and orthogonal frequency division multiplexing; synchronization, channel estimation, and equalization; communication in fading channels; and wireless standards. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Electrical Engineering 371C and 379K (Topic: Wireless Communications Laboratory) may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 345S, 351M, or 360K with a grade of at least C; and credit with a grade of at least C or registration for Aerospace Engineering 333T, Biomedical Engineering 333T, Chemical Engineering 333T, Civil Engineering 333T, Electrical Engineering 333T, Mechanical Engineering 333T, or Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering 333T.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17030 Syllabus Books MW
F
11:00AM-12:30PM
01:00PM-04:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17035 Syllabus Books MW
T
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17040 Syllabus Books MW
W
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17045 Syllabus Books MW
TH
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert

EE 374K: BIOMED ELECT INSTRUMENT DESIGN

Application of techniques of electrical engineering to analysis and instrumentation in biological sciences: pressure, flow, temperature measurement; bioelectric signals; pacemakers; ultrasonics; electrical safety; electrotherapeutics and lasers. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 438 with a grade of at least C.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17050 Syllabus Books MW 03:30PM-05:00PM BUR 224 Pearce, John

EE 679HA: UNDERGRADUATE HONORS THESIS

Research performed during two consecutive semesters under the supervision of an engineering faculty member; topics are selected jointly by the student and the faculty member with approval by the director of the Engineering Honors Program. The student makes an oral presentation and writes a thesis. Individual instruction for two semesters. Students pursuing both the Bachelor of Arts, Plan II, and a bachelor's degree in engineering may use this course to fulfill the thesis requirement for the Bachelor of Arts, Plan II. Prerequisite: For 679HA, enrollment in the Engineering Honors Program; for 679HB, Electrical Engineering 679HA with a grade of at least C and enrollment in the Engineering Honors Program.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17055 Syllabus Books      

EE 679HB: UNDERGRADUATE HONORS THESIS

Research performed during two consecutive semesters under the supervision of an engineering faculty member; topics are selected jointly by the student and the faculty member with approval by the director of the Engineering Honors Program. The student makes an oral presentation and writes a thesis. Individual instruction for two semesters. Students pursuing both the Bachelor of Arts, Plan II, and a bachelor's degree in engineering may use this course to fulfill the thesis requirement for the Bachelor of Arts, Plan II. Prerequisite: For 679HA, enrollment in the Engineering Honors Program; for 679HB, Electrical Engineering 679HA with a grade of at least C and enrollment in the Engineering Honors Program.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17060 Syllabus Books      

EE 379K: 1-CONFERENCE COURSE

The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing.

Topic 1: Conference Course:

Topic 15: Information Theory: Measures of information; noiseless coding and data compression; discrete memoryless channels and channel capacity; broadcast channels; error-correcting codes. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 351K with a grade of at least C.

Topic 20: Computer Architecture; Personal Computer Design: Commercial general purpose processors, memory architecture, buses, storage devices, graphics subsystems, I/O devices and peripherals, audio subsystems, operating systems, benchmarking, manufacturing, and testing of personal computer systems. One class meeting may take place outside of normally scheduled class time for a tour of a PC manufacturing site. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 360N with a grade of at least C.

Topic 21: Information and Cryptography: Information theory; construction of codes; cryptography, including security and randomized encryption; Kolmogorov complexity; statistics, including large deviations, nonparametrics, and information inequalities; Vapnik-Cervonenkis methods for learning theory. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 351K with a grade of at least C.

Topic: Introduction to Data Mining: Goals, methods and applications of datamining; data pre-processing, sampling and visualization; algorithms for machine learning: clustering, classification and prediction/forecasting, mining of information (content, link structure and usage) from the world wide web; search engines design and analysis of social networks; statistical methods. Electrical Engineering 361M and 379K (Topic: Introduction to Data Mining) may not both be counted. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 351K and 322C, and Mathematics 340L with a grade of at least C in each.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17065 Syllabus Books      

EE 380L: 5-ENGR PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 5: Engineering Programming Languages: Higher-level languages for engineering design and problem solving; object-oriented programming in C++ and UNIX systems programming.

Topic 6: Operating Systems Input/output systems calls, drivers and descriptors, and integrated circuits. Design and implementation of hardware and software for a UNIX-like operating system.

Topic 7: Introduction to Pattern Recognition and Computer Vision: Pattern recognition topics, including Bayesian decision theory, maximum likelihood and estimation, nonparametric techniques, and linear discriminant functions. Computer vision topics, including geometric camera models and calibration, geometry of multiple views and stereopsis, structure from motion, and tracking. Emphasis varies each semester.

Topic 8: Computer Vision Systems: Discussion of current research results and exploration of new directions in computer vision systems. Includes linear discriminant functions, nonmetric methods, unsupervised learning and clustering, model-based vision, segmentation using probabilistic methods, and content-based image and video analysis. Application of the techniques to real-world vision systems. Emphasis varies each semester.

Topic 9: Artificial Neural Systems: Feed-forward networks, distributed associative memory, recurrent networks, self-organization, parallel implementation, and applications.

Topic 10: Data Mining: Analyzing large data sets for interesting and useful information. Includes online analytical processing, finding association rules, clustering, classification, and function approximations. Scalability of algorithms and real-life applications.

Topic 11: Mining the Web: Analysis of data and information available from the World Wide Web. Exploiting the hyperlink structure of the Web for developing better search engines. Content analysis, information retrieval, clustering, and hierarchical categorization of Web documents. Web usage mining. Collaborative filtering and personalizing the Web. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 380L (Topic 10: Data Mining) or Computer Sciences 391L.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17075 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM CPE 2.206 Chase, Craig

EE 380N: 7-DSGN COMPUTER-CONTROLLED SYS

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Electrical Engineering 380K or consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Nonlinear Systems: Input-Output Properties:

Topic 2: Nonlinear Systems: Geometric Theory:

Topic 3: Adaptive Control Systems:

Topic 4: Learning Systems and Cybernetic Machines:

Topic 5: Stochastic Control Theory: Dynamic programming in finite and infinite horizon, models with imperfect state information, ergodic control problems, adaptive and risk-sensitive control. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 381J.

Topic 7: Computer Control of Manufacturing Systems:

Topic 8: Algorithms for Parallel and Distributed Computation: Same as Computational and Applied Mathematics 380N.

Topic 9: Fundamentals of Robotics and Mechatronics: Theory of robotics and mechatronics, with emphasis on control, sensing, actuation, low- and high-level vision. Introduction to manipulator geometry, kinematics, dynamics, and planning of trajectories. Robotics laboratory.

Topic 10: Robotics II:

Topic 11: Optimization in Engineering Systems: Formulation and solution of continuous optimization problems in engineering design.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17080 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM RLM 5.112 Flake, Robert

EE 380N: 9-FUNDMTL OF ROBOT & MECHATRON

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Electrical Engineering 380K or consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Nonlinear Systems: Input-Output Properties:

Topic 2: Nonlinear Systems: Geometric Theory:

Topic 3: Adaptive Control Systems:

Topic 4: Learning Systems and Cybernetic Machines:

Topic 5: Stochastic Control Theory: Dynamic programming in finite and infinite horizon, models with imperfect state information, ergodic control problems, adaptive and risk-sensitive control. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 381J.

Topic 7: Computer Control of Manufacturing Systems:

Topic 8: Algorithms for Parallel and Distributed Computation: Same as Computational and Applied Mathematics 380N.

Topic 9: Fundamentals of Robotics and Mechatronics: Theory of robotics and mechatronics, with emphasis on control, sensing, actuation, low- and high-level vision. Introduction to manipulator geometry, kinematics, dynamics, and planning of trajectories. Robotics laboratory.

Topic 10: Robotics II:

Topic 11: Optimization in Engineering Systems: Formulation and solution of continuous optimization problems in engineering design.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17085 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 306 Driga, Mircea

EE 381J: PROBABIL & STOCHASTIC PROCS I

Probability spaces, random variables, expectation, conditional expectation, stochastic convergence, characteristic functions, and limit theorems. Introduction to Markov and Gaussian processes, stationary processes, spectral representation, ergodicity, renewal processes, martingales, and applications to estimation, prediction, and queueing theory. Prerequisite: Graduate standing, and Electrical Engineering 351K or the equivalent.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17090 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 116 Sanghavi, Sujay

EE 381V: CONVEX OPTIMIZATION THEORY

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17110 Syllabus Books MW 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 116 Caramanis, Constantine

EE 381V: NETWORK SCIENCES

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17120 Syllabus Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 126 Shakkottai, Sanjay

EE 381V: WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS LAB

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17125 Syllabus Books MW
F
11:00AM-12:30PM
01:00PM-04:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17130 Syllabus Books MW
T
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17135 Syllabus Books MW
W
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert
17140 Syllabus Books MW
TH
11:00AM-12:30PM
07:00PM-10:00PM
ENS 126
ENS 113
Heath, Robert

EE 382C: SYS ENGR PROG MGMT & EVAL-SE

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Engineering Design of Software and Software Systems: The software development process; selection and application of software design methods; evaluation of software designs.

Topic 2: Creation and Maintenance of Distributed Software Systems: Creation of large distributed software applications, with emphasis on specification, failure models, correctness, security.

Topic 3: Verification and Validation of Software: Evaluation of software for correctness, efficiency, performance, and reliability.

Topic 4: Software/Hardware Engineering Project Management: Requirements for a project management plan; role of the manager of the software development life cycle; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 5: Large Software/Hardware/Communications Systems Engineering: Techniques used to specify and design systems of software, hardware, and communications components. Creation of a requirements document and system specification.

Topic 6: Software for Highly-Available Distributed Applications:

Topic 7: Software Architectures: Software engineering approaches; scenario-based engineering processes to analyze problem domain; domain modeling and representations; creation of component-based reference architecture providing an object-oriented representation of system requirements.

Topic 8: Methodologies for Hardware/Software Codesign: Techniques used to design complex hardware/software systems; emphasis on specification, modeling, estimation, partitioning, verification/validation, and synthesis.

Topic 9: Embedded Software Systems: Dataflow models, uniprocessor and multiprocessor scheduling, hardware/software codesign, hierarchical finite state machines, synchronous languages, reactive systems, synchronous/reactive languages, heterogeneous systems.

Topic 10: Empirical Studies in Software Engineering:

Topic 11: Requirements Engineering:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17145 Syllabus Books     McCann, Robert

EE 382C: 3-VERIF & VALIDATN OF SOFTWARE

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Engineering Design of Software and Software Systems: The software development process; selection and application of software design methods; evaluation of software designs.

Topic 2: Creation and Maintenance of Distributed Software Systems: Creation of large distributed software applications, with emphasis on specification, failure models, correctness, security.

Topic 3: Verification and Validation of Software: Evaluation of software for correctness, efficiency, performance, and reliability.

Topic 4: Software/Hardware Engineering Project Management: Requirements for a project management plan; role of the manager of the software development life cycle; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 5: Large Software/Hardware/Communications Systems Engineering: Techniques used to specify and design systems of software, hardware, and communications components. Creation of a requirements document and system specification.

Topic 6: Software for Highly-Available Distributed Applications:

Topic 7: Software Architectures: Software engineering approaches; scenario-based engineering processes to analyze problem domain; domain modeling and representations; creation of component-based reference architecture providing an object-oriented representation of system requirements.

Topic 8: Methodologies for Hardware/Software Codesign: Techniques used to design complex hardware/software systems; emphasis on specification, modeling, estimation, partitioning, verification/validation, and synthesis.

Topic 9: Embedded Software Systems: Dataflow models, uniprocessor and multiprocessor scheduling, hardware/software codesign, hierarchical finite state machines, synchronous languages, reactive systems, synchronous/reactive languages, heterogeneous systems.

Topic 10: Empirical Studies in Software Engineering:

Topic 11: Requirements Engineering:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17150 Syllabus Books MW 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 306 Khurshid, Sarfraz

EE 382C: 7-SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURES

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Engineering Design of Software and Software Systems: The software development process; selection and application of software design methods; evaluation of software designs.

Topic 2: Creation and Maintenance of Distributed Software Systems: Creation of large distributed software applications, with emphasis on specification, failure models, correctness, security.

Topic 3: Verification and Validation of Software: Evaluation of software for correctness, efficiency, performance, and reliability.

Topic 4: Software/Hardware Engineering Project Management: Requirements for a project management plan; role of the manager of the software development life cycle; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 5: Large Software/Hardware/Communications Systems Engineering: Techniques used to specify and design systems of software, hardware, and communications components. Creation of a requirements document and system specification.

Topic 6: Software for Highly-Available Distributed Applications:

Topic 7: Software Architectures: Software engineering approaches; scenario-based engineering processes to analyze problem domain; domain modeling and representations; creation of component-based reference architecture providing an object-oriented representation of system requirements.

Topic 8: Methodologies for Hardware/Software Codesign: Techniques used to design complex hardware/software systems; emphasis on specification, modeling, estimation, partitioning, verification/validation, and synthesis.

Topic 9: Embedded Software Systems: Dataflow models, uniprocessor and multiprocessor scheduling, hardware/software codesign, hierarchical finite state machines, synchronous languages, reactive systems, synchronous/reactive languages, heterogeneous systems.

Topic 10: Empirical Studies in Software Engineering:

Topic 11: Requirements Engineering:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17155 Syllabus Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 116 Barber, Suzanne

EE 382C: 7-SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURES-SE

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Engineering Design of Software and Software Systems: The software development process; selection and application of software design methods; evaluation of software designs.

Topic 2: Creation and Maintenance of Distributed Software Systems: Creation of large distributed software applications, with emphasis on specification, failure models, correctness, security.

Topic 3: Verification and Validation of Software: Evaluation of software for correctness, efficiency, performance, and reliability.

Topic 4: Software/Hardware Engineering Project Management: Requirements for a project management plan; role of the manager of the software development life cycle; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 5: Large Software/Hardware/Communications Systems Engineering: Techniques used to specify and design systems of software, hardware, and communications components. Creation of a requirements document and system specification.

Topic 6: Software for Highly-Available Distributed Applications:

Topic 7: Software Architectures: Software engineering approaches; scenario-based engineering processes to analyze problem domain; domain modeling and representations; creation of component-based reference architecture providing an object-oriented representation of system requirements.

Topic 8: Methodologies for Hardware/Software Codesign: Techniques used to design complex hardware/software systems; emphasis on specification, modeling, estimation, partitioning, verification/validation, and synthesis.

Topic 9: Embedded Software Systems: Dataflow models, uniprocessor and multiprocessor scheduling, hardware/software codesign, hierarchical finite state machines, synchronous languages, reactive systems, synchronous/reactive languages, heterogeneous systems.

Topic 10: Empirical Studies in Software Engineering:

Topic 11: Requirements Engineering:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17156 Syllabus Books     Barber, Suzanne

EE 382M: 7-VLSI I

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: VLSI Testing: Hardware and software reliability analysis of digital systems; testing, design for testability, self-diagnosis, fault-tolerant logic design, error-detecting and error-correcting codes.

Topic 2: Dependable Computing: Design techniques for reliable, fault-tolerant, fail-safe and fail-soft systems; fault diagnosis and fault avoidance methods at program and system levels; experimental and commercial fault-tolerant computer systems.

Topic 4: Digital Systems Simulation: Uses and limitations of simulation algorithms for digital circuits and systems.

Topic 7: VLSI I: CMOS technology; structured digital circuits; VLSI systems; computer-aided design tools and theory for design automation; chip design.

Topic 8: VLSI II: Microelectronic systems architecture; VLSI circuit testing methods; integration of heterogeneous computer-aided design tools; wafer scale integration; advanced high-speed circuit design and integration.

Topic 9: Simulation Methods in CAD/VLSI: Techniques and algorithms for simulating large-scale digital and analog circuits.

Topic 10: Synthesis of Digital Systems: Automatic generation of gate-level implementations from HDL specifications; optimization of two-level, multilevel, and sequential circuits for area, speed, and testability.

Topic 11: Verification of Digital Systems: Automatic verification of digital systems; formal models and specifications, equivalence checking, design verification, temporal logic, BDDs, logical foundations, automata theory, recent developments.

Topic 12: System Design Metrics: Analysis of design at chip, board, and system levels; life cycle implications of design decisions, including design for testability effects on production and field service; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 13: Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits:

Topic 14: Analog Integrated Circuit Design:

Topic 15: Computer Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Performance metrics, benchmarks, measurement tools and techniques, simulation, trace generation, sampling, analytical modeling, workload characterization, statistical methods to compare alternatives, linear regression, and design of experiments.

Topic 16: Application-Specific Processing:

Topic 17: High-Level Synthesis of Digital Systems:

Topic 18: Java Processing: The Java run-time environment, Java Virtual Machine, processing Java in interpreted and JIT compilation modes, Java processors, Java benchmarks, characterization of Java workloads, performance impact of Java, optimizing microprocessors for Java.

Topic 19: Mixed-Signal System Design and Modeling:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17160 Syllabus Books TTH 09:30AM-11:00AM ACA 1.104 Abraham, Jacob

EE 382M: 8-VLSI II-ICS

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: VLSI Testing: Hardware and software reliability analysis of digital systems; testing, design for testability, self-diagnosis, fault-tolerant logic design, error-detecting and error-correcting codes.

Topic 2: Dependable Computing: Design techniques for reliable, fault-tolerant, fail-safe and fail-soft systems; fault diagnosis and fault avoidance methods at program and system levels; experimental and commercial fault-tolerant computer systems.

Topic 4: Digital Systems Simulation: Uses and limitations of simulation algorithms for digital circuits and systems.

Topic 7: VLSI I: CMOS technology; structured digital circuits; VLSI systems; computer-aided design tools and theory for design automation; chip design.

Topic 8: VLSI II: Microelectronic systems architecture; VLSI circuit testing methods; integration of heterogeneous computer-aided design tools; wafer scale integration; advanced high-speed circuit design and integration.

Topic 9: Simulation Methods in CAD/VLSI: Techniques and algorithms for simulating large-scale digital and analog circuits.

Topic 10: Synthesis of Digital Systems: Automatic generation of gate-level implementations from HDL specifications; optimization of two-level, multilevel, and sequential circuits for area, speed, and testability.

Topic 11: Verification of Digital Systems: Automatic verification of digital systems; formal models and specifications, equivalence checking, design verification, temporal logic, BDDs, logical foundations, automata theory, recent developments.

Topic 12: System Design Metrics: Analysis of design at chip, board, and system levels; life cycle implications of design decisions, including design for testability effects on production and field service; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 13: Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits:

Topic 14: Analog Integrated Circuit Design:

Topic 15: Computer Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Performance metrics, benchmarks, measurement tools and techniques, simulation, trace generation, sampling, analytical modeling, workload characterization, statistical methods to compare alternatives, linear regression, and design of experiments.

Topic 16: Application-Specific Processing:

Topic 17: High-Level Synthesis of Digital Systems:

Topic 18: Java Processing: The Java run-time environment, Java Virtual Machine, processing Java in interpreted and JIT compilation modes, Java processors, Java benchmarks, characterization of Java workloads, performance impact of Java, optimizing microprocessors for Java.

Topic 19: Mixed-Signal System Design and Modeling:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17165   Books     McDermott, Mark

EE 382M: 14-ANALOG INTEG CIRCUIT DESIGN

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: VLSI Testing: Hardware and software reliability analysis of digital systems; testing, design for testability, self-diagnosis, fault-tolerant logic design, error-detecting and error-correcting codes.

Topic 2: Dependable Computing: Design techniques for reliable, fault-tolerant, fail-safe and fail-soft systems; fault diagnosis and fault avoidance methods at program and system levels; experimental and commercial fault-tolerant computer systems.

Topic 4: Digital Systems Simulation: Uses and limitations of simulation algorithms for digital circuits and systems.

Topic 7: VLSI I: CMOS technology; structured digital circuits; VLSI systems; computer-aided design tools and theory for design automation; chip design.

Topic 8: VLSI II: Microelectronic systems architecture; VLSI circuit testing methods; integration of heterogeneous computer-aided design tools; wafer scale integration; advanced high-speed circuit design and integration.

Topic 9: Simulation Methods in CAD/VLSI: Techniques and algorithms for simulating large-scale digital and analog circuits.

Topic 10: Synthesis of Digital Systems: Automatic generation of gate-level implementations from HDL specifications; optimization of two-level, multilevel, and sequential circuits for area, speed, and testability.

Topic 11: Verification of Digital Systems: Automatic verification of digital systems; formal models and specifications, equivalence checking, design verification, temporal logic, BDDs, logical foundations, automata theory, recent developments.

Topic 12: System Design Metrics: Analysis of design at chip, board, and system levels; life cycle implications of design decisions, including design for testability effects on production and field service; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 13: Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits:

Topic 14: Analog Integrated Circuit Design:

Topic 15: Computer Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Performance metrics, benchmarks, measurement tools and techniques, simulation, trace generation, sampling, analytical modeling, workload characterization, statistical methods to compare alternatives, linear regression, and design of experiments.

Topic 16: Application-Specific Processing:

Topic 17: High-Level Synthesis of Digital Systems:

Topic 18: Java Processing: The Java run-time environment, Java Virtual Machine, processing Java in interpreted and JIT compilation modes, Java processors, Java benchmarks, characterization of Java workloads, performance impact of Java, optimizing microprocessors for Java.

Topic 19: Mixed-Signal System Design and Modeling:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17170 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 115 Hassibi, Arjang

EE 382M: 15-COMP PERF EVAL/BENCHMARKING

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: VLSI Testing: Hardware and software reliability analysis of digital systems; testing, design for testability, self-diagnosis, fault-tolerant logic design, error-detecting and error-correcting codes.

Topic 2: Dependable Computing: Design techniques for reliable, fault-tolerant, fail-safe and fail-soft systems; fault diagnosis and fault avoidance methods at program and system levels; experimental and commercial fault-tolerant computer systems.

Topic 4: Digital Systems Simulation: Uses and limitations of simulation algorithms for digital circuits and systems.

Topic 7: VLSI I: CMOS technology; structured digital circuits; VLSI systems; computer-aided design tools and theory for design automation; chip design.

Topic 8: VLSI II: Microelectronic systems architecture; VLSI circuit testing methods; integration of heterogeneous computer-aided design tools; wafer scale integration; advanced high-speed circuit design and integration.

Topic 9: Simulation Methods in CAD/VLSI: Techniques and algorithms for simulating large-scale digital and analog circuits.

Topic 10: Synthesis of Digital Systems: Automatic generation of gate-level implementations from HDL specifications; optimization of two-level, multilevel, and sequential circuits for area, speed, and testability.

Topic 11: Verification of Digital Systems: Automatic verification of digital systems; formal models and specifications, equivalence checking, design verification, temporal logic, BDDs, logical foundations, automata theory, recent developments.

Topic 12: System Design Metrics: Analysis of design at chip, board, and system levels; life cycle implications of design decisions, including design for testability effects on production and field service; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 13: Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits:

Topic 14: Analog Integrated Circuit Design:

Topic 15: Computer Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Performance metrics, benchmarks, measurement tools and techniques, simulation, trace generation, sampling, analytical modeling, workload characterization, statistical methods to compare alternatives, linear regression, and design of experiments.

Topic 16: Application-Specific Processing:

Topic 17: High-Level Synthesis of Digital Systems:

Topic 18: Java Processing: The Java run-time environment, Java Virtual Machine, processing Java in interpreted and JIT compilation modes, Java processors, Java benchmarks, characterization of Java workloads, performance impact of Java, optimizing microprocessors for Java.

Topic 19: Mixed-Signal System Design and Modeling:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17175 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 116 John, Lizy

EE 382M: 19-MIXED-SIGNAL SYS DSGN/MODEL

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: VLSI Testing: Hardware and software reliability analysis of digital systems; testing, design for testability, self-diagnosis, fault-tolerant logic design, error-detecting and error-correcting codes.

Topic 2: Dependable Computing: Design techniques for reliable, fault-tolerant, fail-safe and fail-soft systems; fault diagnosis and fault avoidance methods at program and system levels; experimental and commercial fault-tolerant computer systems.

Topic 4: Digital Systems Simulation: Uses and limitations of simulation algorithms for digital circuits and systems.

Topic 7: VLSI I: CMOS technology; structured digital circuits; VLSI systems; computer-aided design tools and theory for design automation; chip design.

Topic 8: VLSI II: Microelectronic systems architecture; VLSI circuit testing methods; integration of heterogeneous computer-aided design tools; wafer scale integration; advanced high-speed circuit design and integration.

Topic 9: Simulation Methods in CAD/VLSI: Techniques and algorithms for simulating large-scale digital and analog circuits.

Topic 10: Synthesis of Digital Systems: Automatic generation of gate-level implementations from HDL specifications; optimization of two-level, multilevel, and sequential circuits for area, speed, and testability.

Topic 11: Verification of Digital Systems: Automatic verification of digital systems; formal models and specifications, equivalence checking, design verification, temporal logic, BDDs, logical foundations, automata theory, recent developments.

Topic 12: System Design Metrics: Analysis of design at chip, board, and system levels; life cycle implications of design decisions, including design for testability effects on production and field service; economic and customer-driven factors.

Topic 13: Analysis and Design of Digital Integrated Circuits:

Topic 14: Analog Integrated Circuit Design:

Topic 15: Computer Performance Evaluation and Benchmarking: Performance metrics, benchmarks, measurement tools and techniques, simulation, trace generation, sampling, analytical modeling, workload characterization, statistical methods to compare alternatives, linear regression, and design of experiments.

Topic 16: Application-Specific Processing:

Topic 17: High-Level Synthesis of Digital Systems:

Topic 18: Java Processing: The Java run-time environment, Java Virtual Machine, processing Java in interpreted and JIT compilation modes, Java processors, Java benchmarks, characterization of Java workloads, performance impact of Java, optimizing microprocessors for Java.

Topic 19: Mixed-Signal System Design and Modeling:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17180 Syllabus Books TTH 06:30PM-08:00PM ENS 115 Swanson, Eric

EE 382N: 4-ADV EMBED MICROCONTROL SYS

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17190 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 116 McDermott, Mark

EE 382N: 5-COMM NTWK: TECH/ARCH/PROTOCL

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17195 Syllabus Books MW 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 145 Nettles, Scott

EE 382N: 10-PARALLEL COMP ARCHITECTURE

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17200 Syllabus Books MW 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 126 Chiou, Derek

EE 382N: 14-HIGH-SPEED COMP ARITHMTC I

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17205 Syllabus Books MW 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 145 Swartzlander, Earl

EE 382N: 16-DIST INFO SYS SECURITY-SE

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17207   Books     Bard, William

EE 382N: 20-COMP ARCH: PARALLISM/LOCLTY

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Interconnection Networks: Topologies, routing algorithms, permutations, resource allocations, performance evaluation, fault tolerance, VLSI design, parallel/distributed algorithms, languages for specifying protocols, distributed operating systems.

Topic 4: Advanced Embedded Microcontroller Systems: Hardware and software design of microcontroller systems; applications, including communication systems; object-oriented and operating systems approaches to interfacing and resource management.

Topic 5: Communication Networks: Technology, Architectures, and Protocols: Network services and techniques, layered architectures, circuit and packet-switching networks, internetworking, switch architectures, control mechanisms, and economic issues.

Topic 10: Parallel Computer Architecture: Study of parallel computing, including models, algorithms, languages, compilers, interconnection networks, and architectures.

Topic 11: Distributed Systems: Concurrent programming languages, distributed algorithms, distributed operating systems, distributed data, formal models of concurrency, protection and security in computer networks.

Topic 12: Discrete Event Systems: Models for discrete event systems, state machines, Petri nets, algebraic models, temporal logic, control of discrete event systems, observability, stability, simulation.

Topic 14: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic I: Design of computer arithmetic units: fast adders, fast multipliers, dividers, and floating-point arithmetic units.

Topic 15: High-Speed Computer Arithmetic II: Advanced topics in computer arithmetic, including error correcting coding, residue number systems, CORDIC arithmetic, and VLSI implementation. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 382N (Topic 14).

Topic 16: Distributed Information System Security:

Topic 17: Superscalar Microprocessor Architectures: Superscalar processor architectures, comparison with VLIW processors, program parallelism, performance evaluation, trace generation, memory systems, branch prediction.

Topic 18: Distributed Systems II:

Topic 19: Microarchitecture:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17208 Syllabus Books MW 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 306 Erez, Mattan

EE 382V: ADVANCED ANALOG IC DESIGN-ICS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17213   Books     Gharpurey, Ranjit

EE 382V: DATA ENGINEERING-SE

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17215   Books     Miranker, Daniel

EE 382V: EMBEDDED SYS DSGN AND MODELING

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17220 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 109 Gerstlauer, Andreas

EE 382V: MOBILE COMPUTING-SE

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17225 Syllabus Books     Julien, Christine

EE 382V: NANOSCALE IC DESIGN

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17230 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 145 Orshansky, Michael

EE 382V: OPTIMIZATN ISSUES IN VLSI CAD

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17240 Syllabus Books MW 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 126 Pan, David Z.

EE 382V: RADIO FREQ INTEG CIRCUIT DSGN

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17246 Syllabus Books MW 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 115 Gharpurey, Ranjit

EE 382V: SYSTEM-ON-A-CHIP DESIGN-ICS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17248 Syllabus Books     Gerstlauer, Andreas

EE 382V: SOFTWARE EVOLUTION

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17250 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 306 Kim, Miryung

EE 382V: VLSI TESTING-ICS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17257 Syllabus Books     Touba, Nur

EE 383L: ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELD THEORY

Vector space, Green's function; equivalence theorem; vector potentials; plane, cylindrical, and spherical waves; radiation and scattering. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering, or graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17260 Syllabus Books MW 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 126 Ling, Hao

EE 383N: THRY OF ELECMAG FLD: ELECDYNAM

Intermediate electromagnetic field theory, with emphasis on the interaction of fields and material media, including anisotropic media. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17265 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 109 Alu, Andrea

EE 383V: NONLINEAR OPTICS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17270 Syllabus Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 109 Belkin, Mikhail

EE 384N: 1-ACOUSTICS I

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Acoustics I: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics). Plane waves in fluids; transient and steady-state reflection and transmission; lumped elements; refraction; strings, membranes, and rooms; horns; ray acoustics; absorption and dispersion.

Topic 2: Acoustics II: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 2: Acoustics II). Rigorous derivation of acoustic wave equation; spherical and cylindrical waves; source theory; vibrating piston; enclosures; waveguides; arrays; diffraction. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1) or Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I).

Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers). Electrical, mechanical, and acoustical dynamics; principles of energy conversion, transducer laws, and representation; effects of the transducer characteristics on accuracy and efficiency of energy transformation. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Sensors/Actuators) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 3) may not both be counted.

Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics: Same as Mechnical Engineering 384N (Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics). Distortion and shock formation in finite amplitude waves; harmonic generation and spectral interactions; absorption and dispersion; radiation pressure; acoustic streaming; weak shock theory; numerical modeling; diffraction of intense sound beams; parametric arrays.

Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics). Acoustical properties of the ocean; point sources and Green's functions; reflection phenomena; ray theory; normal mode theory; guided waves in horizontally stratified fluid media; WKB and parabolic approximations. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1), Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I), or consent of instructor.

Topic 6: Noise Control: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 6: Noise Control). Acoustic modeling techniques; panel radiation theory; absorption, barrier, and enclosure design; diagnosis based on experimental data.

Topic 7: Ultrasonics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics). Acoustic wave propagation in liquids and solids and at interfaces; transducers, arrays; imaging and sonar systems. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 7) may not both be counted.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17275 Syllabus Books MWF 09:00AM-10:00AM ETC 5.132 Hamilton, Mark

EE 384N: 3-ELECTROMECHANCL TRANSDUCERS

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Acoustics I: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics). Plane waves in fluids; transient and steady-state reflection and transmission; lumped elements; refraction; strings, membranes, and rooms; horns; ray acoustics; absorption and dispersion.

Topic 2: Acoustics II: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 2: Acoustics II). Rigorous derivation of acoustic wave equation; spherical and cylindrical waves; source theory; vibrating piston; enclosures; waveguides; arrays; diffraction. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1) or Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I).

Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers). Electrical, mechanical, and acoustical dynamics; principles of energy conversion, transducer laws, and representation; effects of the transducer characteristics on accuracy and efficiency of energy transformation. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Sensors/Actuators) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 3) may not both be counted.

Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics: Same as Mechnical Engineering 384N (Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics). Distortion and shock formation in finite amplitude waves; harmonic generation and spectral interactions; absorption and dispersion; radiation pressure; acoustic streaming; weak shock theory; numerical modeling; diffraction of intense sound beams; parametric arrays.

Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics). Acoustical properties of the ocean; point sources and Green's functions; reflection phenomena; ray theory; normal mode theory; guided waves in horizontally stratified fluid media; WKB and parabolic approximations. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1), Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I), or consent of instructor.

Topic 6: Noise Control: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 6: Noise Control). Acoustic modeling techniques; panel radiation theory; absorption, barrier, and enclosure design; diagnosis based on experimental data.

Topic 7: Ultrasonics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics). Acoustic wave propagation in liquids and solids and at interfaces; transducers, arrays; imaging and sonar systems. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 7) may not both be counted.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17280 Syllabus Books MWF 11:00AM-12:00PM ETC 5.132 Hall, Neal

EE 384N: 5-UNDERWATER ACOUSTICS

May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Acoustics I: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics). Plane waves in fluids; transient and steady-state reflection and transmission; lumped elements; refraction; strings, membranes, and rooms; horns; ray acoustics; absorption and dispersion.

Topic 2: Acoustics II: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 2: Acoustics II). Rigorous derivation of acoustic wave equation; spherical and cylindrical waves; source theory; vibrating piston; enclosures; waveguides; arrays; diffraction. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1) or Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I).

Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Transducers). Electrical, mechanical, and acoustical dynamics; principles of energy conversion, transducer laws, and representation; effects of the transducer characteristics on accuracy and efficiency of energy transformation. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 3: Electromechanical Sensors/Actuators) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 3) may not both be counted.

Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics: Same as Mechnical Engineering 384N (Topic 4: Nonlinear Acoustics). Distortion and shock formation in finite amplitude waves; harmonic generation and spectral interactions; absorption and dispersion; radiation pressure; acoustic streaming; weak shock theory; numerical modeling; diffraction of intense sound beams; parametric arrays.

Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 5: Underwater Acoustics). Acoustical properties of the ocean; point sources and Green's functions; reflection phenomena; ray theory; normal mode theory; guided waves in horizontally stratified fluid media; WKB and parabolic approximations. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 1), Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 1: Acoustics I), or consent of instructor.

Topic 6: Noise Control: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 6: Noise Control). Acoustic modeling techniques; panel radiation theory; absorption, barrier, and enclosure design; diagnosis based on experimental data.

Topic 7: Ultrasonics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics). Acoustic wave propagation in liquids and solids and at interfaces; transducers, arrays; imaging and sonar systems. Biomedical Engineering 384N (Topic 7: Ultrasonics) and Electrical Engineering 384N (Topic 7) may not both be counted.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17285   Books TTH 09:00AM-10:30AM ARL A010 ISAKSON, M

EE 385J: 31-BIOMED INSTRUMENTATION I

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in engineering and consent of instructor.

Topic 3: Bioelectric Phenomena: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 4: Bioelectric Phenomena). Examines the physiological bases of bioelectricity and the techniques required to record bioelectric phenomena both intracellularly and extracellularly; the representation of bioelectric activity by equivalent dipoles and the volume conductor fields produced.

Topic 9: Laser-Tissue Interaction: Thermal: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 1: Laser-Tissue Interaction: Thermal). The thermal response of random media in interaction with laser irradiation. Calculation of the rate of heat production caused by direct absorption of the laser light, thermal damage, and ablation.

Topic 15: Biosignal Analysis: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 3: Biosignal Analysis). Theory and classification of biological signals such as EEG, EKG, and EMG. Data acquisition and analysis procedures for biological signals, including computer applications.

Topic 16: Laser-Tissue Interaction: Optical: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 2: Laser-Tissue Interaction: Optical). The optical behavior of random media such as tissue in interaction with laser irradiation. Approximate transport equation methods to predict the absorption and scattering parameters of laser light inside tissue. Port-wine stain treatment; cancer treatment by photochemotherapy; and cardiovascular applications.

Topic 17: Biomedical Instrumentation II: Real-Time Computer-Based Systems: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 2: Biomedical Instrumentation II: Real-Time Computer-Based Systems). Design, testing, patient safety, electrical noise, biomedical measurement transducers, therapeutics, instrumentation electronics, microcomputer interfaces, and embedded systems. Four structured laboratories and an individual project laboratory.

Topic 18: Biomedical Imaging: Signals and Systems: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 3: Biomedical Imaging: Signals and Systems). Physical principles and signal processing techniques used in thermographic, ultrasonic, and radiographic imaging, including image reconstruction from projections such as CT scanning, MRI, and millimeter wave determination of temperature profiles. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 371R.

Topic 23: Optical Spectroscopy: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 4: Optical Spectroscopy). Measurement and interpretation of spectra: steady-state and time-resolved absorption, fluorescence, phosphorescence, and Raman spectroscopy in the ultraviolet, visible, and infrared portions of the spectrum.

Topic 26: Therapeutic Heating: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 5: Therapeutic Heating). Engineering aspects of electromagnetic fields that have therapeutic applications: diathermy (short wave, microwave, and ultrasound), electrosurgery (thermal damage processes), stimulation of excitable tissue, and electrical safety.

Topic 28: Noninvasive Optical Tomography: Same as Biomedical Engineering 381J (Topic 6: Noninvasive Optical Tomography). Basic principles of optical tomographic imaging of biological materials for diagnostic or therapeutic applications. Optical-based tomographic imaging techniques including photothermal, photoacoustic, and coherent methodologies.

Topic 31: Biomedical Instrumentation I: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 1: Biomedical Instrumentation I). Application of electrical engineering techniques to analysis and instrumentation in biological sciences: pressure, flow, temperature measurement; bioelectrical signals; pacemakers; ultrasonics; electrical safety; electrotherapeutics.

Topic 32: Projects in Biomedical Engineering: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 5: Projects in Biomedical Engineering). An in-depth examination of selected topics, such as optical and thermal properties of laser interaction with tissue; measurement of perfusion in the microvascular system; diagnostic imaging; interaction of living systems with electromagnetic fields; robotic surgical tools; ophthalmic instrumentation; noninvasive cardiovascular measurements. Three lecture hours and six laboratory hours a week for one semester. Additional prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 385J (Topic 31).

Topic 33: Neurophysiology/Prosthesis Design: Same as Biomedical Engineering 384J (Topic 6: Neurophysiology/Prosthesis Design). The structure and function of the human brain. Discussion of selected neurological diseases in conjunction with normal neurophysiology. Study of neuroprosthesis treatments and design philosophy, functional neural stimulation, and functional muscular stimulation.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17290 Syllabus Books MW 03:30PM-05:00PM BUR 224 Pearce, John

EE 385V: CLINICAL CARDIOLOGY

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17297   Books W 10:00AM-11:00AM ETC 2.140 BEASLEY, H

EE 394: 7-POWER ELEC DEVICES AND SYS

Steady-state and transient analysis; symmetrical components, stability, protection, relaying. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering, or graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Power System Instrumentation and Control: Study of control functions related to energy control centers and to power plant control.

Topic 3: Advanced Apparatus Design Topics: Study of unconventional machinery; power electronic drive systems for machines.

Topic 4: Economic Operation of Power Systems: Advanced techniques for operating power systems in the most economic manner while meeting various network constraints; economic dispatch, penalty factors, optimal power flow.

Topic 5: Power System Dynamics and Stability: Computer methods for solving and predicting the behavior of networks during short-term and long-term disturbances.

Topic 6: Advanced Electric Machinery: Detailed modeling and design of large induction and synchronous machines.

Topic 7: Power Electronic Devices and Systems: A study of power electronic components and circuits; HVDC converters; electronic drives for machines; AC/DC converters.

Topic 8: Power Transmission and Distribution Topics: Calculation of electric fields, standing waves, audible noise, corona, and high voltage effects.

Topic 9: Power Quality: The study of electrical transients, switching surges, lightning, and other phenomena that cause deviations in 60-hertz sinusoidal voltages and currents.

Topic 10: Electromechanical Dynamics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384E (Topic 1: Electromechanical Dynamics). Maxwell's equations and transient response of electrical machines.

Topic 11: Design of Electrical Machines: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384E (Topic 2: Design of Electrical Machines). Electrical and mechanical design of electrical machines.

Topic 12: Open-Access Transmission: Terms and conditions, pricing methodologies, independent system operators, ancillary services, auctions and bid strategies, losses and allocation policies.

Topic 13: Intelligent Motion for Robotics and Control:

Topic 14: Electrical Transients in Power Systems: Analysis and modeling of electrical transient phenomena in power systems, traveling wave, insulation coordination, overvoltage protection.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17300 Syllabus Books MW
TH
02:00PM-03:00PM
09:30AM-11:00AM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
17305 Syllabus Books MW
TH
02:00PM-03:00PM
11:00AM-12:30PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
17310 Syllabus Books MW
F
02:00PM-03:00PM
12:30PM-02:00PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William
17315 Syllabus Books MW
F
02:00PM-03:00PM
02:00PM-03:30PM
ENS 115
ENS 212
Grady, William

EE 394: 9-POWER QUALITY

Steady-state and transient analysis; symmetrical components, stability, protection, relaying. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering, or graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Power System Instrumentation and Control: Study of control functions related to energy control centers and to power plant control.

Topic 3: Advanced Apparatus Design Topics: Study of unconventional machinery; power electronic drive systems for machines.

Topic 4: Economic Operation of Power Systems: Advanced techniques for operating power systems in the most economic manner while meeting various network constraints; economic dispatch, penalty factors, optimal power flow.

Topic 5: Power System Dynamics and Stability: Computer methods for solving and predicting the behavior of networks during short-term and long-term disturbances.

Topic 6: Advanced Electric Machinery: Detailed modeling and design of large induction and synchronous machines.

Topic 7: Power Electronic Devices and Systems: A study of power electronic components and circuits; HVDC converters; electronic drives for machines; AC/DC converters.

Topic 8: Power Transmission and Distribution Topics: Calculation of electric fields, standing waves, audible noise, corona, and high voltage effects.

Topic 9: Power Quality: The study of electrical transients, switching surges, lightning, and other phenomena that cause deviations in 60-hertz sinusoidal voltages and currents.

Topic 10: Electromechanical Dynamics: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384E (Topic 1: Electromechanical Dynamics). Maxwell's equations and transient response of electrical machines.

Topic 11: Design of Electrical Machines: Same as Mechanical Engineering 384E (Topic 2: Design of Electrical Machines). Electrical and mechanical design of electrical machines.

Topic 12: Open-Access Transmission: Terms and conditions, pricing methodologies, independent system operators, ancillary services, auctions and bid strategies, losses and allocation policies.

Topic 13: Intelligent Motion for Robotics and Control:

Topic 14: Electrical Transients in Power Systems: Analysis and modeling of electrical transient phenomena in power systems, traveling wave, insulation coordination, overvoltage protection.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17320 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 127 Santoso, Surya

EE 394V: ADVANCED POWER ELECTRONICS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17325 Syllabus Books TTH 03:30PM-05:00PM ENS 116 Kwasinski, Alexis

EE 396K: 16-SEMICONDUCTOR LASERS

Theory of electron, magnetic, and electro-optic devices. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology:

Topic 2: Semiconductor Physics: Introduction to the fundamental physics of charge carrier states in semiconductors, charge carrier interactions among themselves and with the environment, and charge transport in semiconductors and their heterostructures. Additional prerequisite: An introductory course in quantum mechanics.

Topic 4: Synthesis, Growth, and Analysis of Electronic Materials:

Topic 5: Superconducting Electronic Devices:

Topic 6: Magnetic Phenomena in Materials:

Topic 7: MOS Integrated Circuit Process Integration:

Topic 8: VLSI Fabrication Techniques:

Topic 9: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 1: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids). Description of electrons, from free atoms to crystals; band theory contrasted with crystal-field theory; evolution of electronic properties on passing from magnetic insulators to normal metals, from ionic to covalent solids, from single-valent compounds to mixed-valent systems; electron-lattice interactions and phase transitions; many examples. Additional prerequisite: A semester of quantum mechanics and a semester of solid-state science or technology.

Topic 10: Ionic Conductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 1: Ionic Conductors).

Topic 11: High-Temperature Superconductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 2: High-Temperature Superconductors).

Topic 12: Catalytic Electrodes: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 3: Catalytic Electrodes).

Topic 13: Magnetic Materials: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 4: Magnetic Materials).

Topic 14: Optical Interconnects:

Topic 15: Optoelectronics Integrated Circuits:

Topic 16: Semiconductor Lasers:

Topic 17: Localized-Electron Phenomena: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 2: Localized-Electron Phenomena). Analysis of the variation in physical properties versus chemical composition of several groups of isostructural transition-metal compounds. Additional prerequisite: A semester of solid-state science and/or quantum mechanics.

Topic 19: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors I: Plasma analysis using Boltzmann and fluid equations; plasma properties, including Debye length, quasineutrality, and sheaths; basic collisional properties, including Coulomb and polarization scattering; analysis of capacitive and wave-heated plasma processing reactors.

Topic 20: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors II: Plasma chemistry and equilibrium; analysis of molecular collisions; chemical kinetics and surface processes; plasma discharge particle and energy balance; analysis of inductive and DC plasma processing reactors; plasma etching, deposition, and implantation.

Topic 21: Submicron Device Physics and Techniques:

Topic 22: Semiconductor Microlithography:

Topic 23: Semiconductor Heterostructures:

Topic 24: Microwave Devices:

Topic 25: Organic and Polymer Semiconductor Devices:

Topic 26: Microelectromechanical Systems:

Topic 27: Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17330 Syllabus Books TTH 12:30PM-02:00PM ENS 109 Cheng, Julian

EE 396K: 19-PLASMA PROC OF SEMICONDS I

Theory of electron, magnetic, and electro-optic devices. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology:

Topic 2: Semiconductor Physics: Introduction to the fundamental physics of charge carrier states in semiconductors, charge carrier interactions among themselves and with the environment, and charge transport in semiconductors and their heterostructures. Additional prerequisite: An introductory course in quantum mechanics.

Topic 4: Synthesis, Growth, and Analysis of Electronic Materials:

Topic 5: Superconducting Electronic Devices:

Topic 6: Magnetic Phenomena in Materials:

Topic 7: MOS Integrated Circuit Process Integration:

Topic 8: VLSI Fabrication Techniques:

Topic 9: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 1: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids). Description of electrons, from free atoms to crystals; band theory contrasted with crystal-field theory; evolution of electronic properties on passing from magnetic insulators to normal metals, from ionic to covalent solids, from single-valent compounds to mixed-valent systems; electron-lattice interactions and phase transitions; many examples. Additional prerequisite: A semester of quantum mechanics and a semester of solid-state science or technology.

Topic 10: Ionic Conductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 1: Ionic Conductors).

Topic 11: High-Temperature Superconductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 2: High-Temperature Superconductors).

Topic 12: Catalytic Electrodes: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 3: Catalytic Electrodes).

Topic 13: Magnetic Materials: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 4: Magnetic Materials).

Topic 14: Optical Interconnects:

Topic 15: Optoelectronics Integrated Circuits:

Topic 16: Semiconductor Lasers:

Topic 17: Localized-Electron Phenomena: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 2: Localized-Electron Phenomena). Analysis of the variation in physical properties versus chemical composition of several groups of isostructural transition-metal compounds. Additional prerequisite: A semester of solid-state science and/or quantum mechanics.

Topic 19: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors I: Plasma analysis using Boltzmann and fluid equations; plasma properties, including Debye length, quasineutrality, and sheaths; basic collisional properties, including Coulomb and polarization scattering; analysis of capacitive and wave-heated plasma processing reactors.

Topic 20: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors II: Plasma chemistry and equilibrium; analysis of molecular collisions; chemical kinetics and surface processes; plasma discharge particle and energy balance; analysis of inductive and DC plasma processing reactors; plasma etching, deposition, and implantation.

Topic 21: Submicron Device Physics and Techniques:

Topic 22: Semiconductor Microlithography:

Topic 23: Semiconductor Heterostructures:

Topic 24: Microwave Devices:

Topic 25: Organic and Polymer Semiconductor Devices:

Topic 26: Microelectromechanical Systems:

Topic 27: Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17335 Syllabus Books MW 12:30PM-02:00PM RLM 6.114 Hallock, Gary

EE 396K: 21-SUBMICRON DEVICE PHY & TECH

Theory of electron, magnetic, and electro-optic devices. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology:

Topic 2: Semiconductor Physics: Introduction to the fundamental physics of charge carrier states in semiconductors, charge carrier interactions among themselves and with the environment, and charge transport in semiconductors and their heterostructures. Additional prerequisite: An introductory course in quantum mechanics.

Topic 4: Synthesis, Growth, and Analysis of Electronic Materials:

Topic 5: Superconducting Electronic Devices:

Topic 6: Magnetic Phenomena in Materials:

Topic 7: MOS Integrated Circuit Process Integration:

Topic 8: VLSI Fabrication Techniques:

Topic 9: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 1: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids). Description of electrons, from free atoms to crystals; band theory contrasted with crystal-field theory; evolution of electronic properties on passing from magnetic insulators to normal metals, from ionic to covalent solids, from single-valent compounds to mixed-valent systems; electron-lattice interactions and phase transitions; many examples. Additional prerequisite: A semester of quantum mechanics and a semester of solid-state science or technology.

Topic 10: Ionic Conductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 1: Ionic Conductors).

Topic 11: High-Temperature Superconductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 2: High-Temperature Superconductors).

Topic 12: Catalytic Electrodes: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 3: Catalytic Electrodes).

Topic 13: Magnetic Materials: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 4: Magnetic Materials).

Topic 14: Optical Interconnects:

Topic 15: Optoelectronics Integrated Circuits:

Topic 16: Semiconductor Lasers:

Topic 17: Localized-Electron Phenomena: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 2: Localized-Electron Phenomena). Analysis of the variation in physical properties versus chemical composition of several groups of isostructural transition-metal compounds. Additional prerequisite: A semester of solid-state science and/or quantum mechanics.

Topic 19: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors I: Plasma analysis using Boltzmann and fluid equations; plasma properties, including Debye length, quasineutrality, and sheaths; basic collisional properties, including Coulomb and polarization scattering; analysis of capacitive and wave-heated plasma processing reactors.

Topic 20: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors II: Plasma chemistry and equilibrium; analysis of molecular collisions; chemical kinetics and surface processes; plasma discharge particle and energy balance; analysis of inductive and DC plasma processing reactors; plasma etching, deposition, and implantation.

Topic 21: Submicron Device Physics and Techniques:

Topic 22: Semiconductor Microlithography:

Topic 23: Semiconductor Heterostructures:

Topic 24: Microwave Devices:

Topic 25: Organic and Polymer Semiconductor Devices:

Topic 26: Microelectromechanical Systems:

Topic 27: Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17340 Syllabus Books MW 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 116 Lee, Jack

EE 396K: 23-SEMICOND HETEROSTRUCTURES

Theory of electron, magnetic, and electro-optic devices. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology:

Topic 2: Semiconductor Physics: Introduction to the fundamental physics of charge carrier states in semiconductors, charge carrier interactions among themselves and with the environment, and charge transport in semiconductors and their heterostructures. Additional prerequisite: An introductory course in quantum mechanics.

Topic 4: Synthesis, Growth, and Analysis of Electronic Materials:

Topic 5: Superconducting Electronic Devices:

Topic 6: Magnetic Phenomena in Materials:

Topic 7: MOS Integrated Circuit Process Integration:

Topic 8: VLSI Fabrication Techniques:

Topic 9: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 1: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids). Description of electrons, from free atoms to crystals; band theory contrasted with crystal-field theory; evolution of electronic properties on passing from magnetic insulators to normal metals, from ionic to covalent solids, from single-valent compounds to mixed-valent systems; electron-lattice interactions and phase transitions; many examples. Additional prerequisite: A semester of quantum mechanics and a semester of solid-state science or technology.

Topic 10: Ionic Conductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 1: Ionic Conductors).

Topic 11: High-Temperature Superconductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 2: High-Temperature Superconductors).

Topic 12: Catalytic Electrodes: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 3: Catalytic Electrodes).

Topic 13: Magnetic Materials: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 4: Magnetic Materials).

Topic 14: Optical Interconnects:

Topic 15: Optoelectronics Integrated Circuits:

Topic 16: Semiconductor Lasers:

Topic 17: Localized-Electron Phenomena: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 2: Localized-Electron Phenomena). Analysis of the variation in physical properties versus chemical composition of several groups of isostructural transition-metal compounds. Additional prerequisite: A semester of solid-state science and/or quantum mechanics.

Topic 19: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors I: Plasma analysis using Boltzmann and fluid equations; plasma properties, including Debye length, quasineutrality, and sheaths; basic collisional properties, including Coulomb and polarization scattering; analysis of capacitive and wave-heated plasma processing reactors.

Topic 20: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors II: Plasma chemistry and equilibrium; analysis of molecular collisions; chemical kinetics and surface processes; plasma discharge particle and energy balance; analysis of inductive and DC plasma processing reactors; plasma etching, deposition, and implantation.

Topic 21: Submicron Device Physics and Techniques:

Topic 22: Semiconductor Microlithography:

Topic 23: Semiconductor Heterostructures:

Topic 24: Microwave Devices:

Topic 25: Organic and Polymer Semiconductor Devices:

Topic 26: Microelectromechanical Systems:

Topic 27: Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17342 Syllabus Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ENS 306 Yu, Edward

EE 396K: 25-ORG/POLYMER SEMICOND DEVICE

Theory of electron, magnetic, and electro-optic devices. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Metal Oxide Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology:

Topic 2: Semiconductor Physics: Introduction to the fundamental physics of charge carrier states in semiconductors, charge carrier interactions among themselves and with the environment, and charge transport in semiconductors and their heterostructures. Additional prerequisite: An introductory course in quantum mechanics.

Topic 4: Synthesis, Growth, and Analysis of Electronic Materials:

Topic 5: Superconducting Electronic Devices:

Topic 6: Magnetic Phenomena in Materials:

Topic 7: MOS Integrated Circuit Process Integration:

Topic 8: VLSI Fabrication Techniques:

Topic 9: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 1: Localized versus Itinerant Electrons in Solids). Description of electrons, from free atoms to crystals; band theory contrasted with crystal-field theory; evolution of electronic properties on passing from magnetic insulators to normal metals, from ionic to covalent solids, from single-valent compounds to mixed-valent systems; electron-lattice interactions and phase transitions; many examples. Additional prerequisite: A semester of quantum mechanics and a semester of solid-state science or technology.

Topic 10: Ionic Conductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 1: Ionic Conductors).

Topic 11: High-Temperature Superconductors: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 2: High-Temperature Superconductors).

Topic 12: Catalytic Electrodes: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 3: Catalytic Electrodes).

Topic 13: Magnetic Materials: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386T (Topic 4: Magnetic Materials).

Topic 14: Optical Interconnects:

Topic 15: Optoelectronics Integrated Circuits:

Topic 16: Semiconductor Lasers:

Topic 17: Localized-Electron Phenomena: Same as Mechanical Engineering 386R (Topic 2: Localized-Electron Phenomena). Analysis of the variation in physical properties versus chemical composition of several groups of isostructural transition-metal compounds. Additional prerequisite: A semester of solid-state science and/or quantum mechanics.

Topic 19: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors I: Plasma analysis using Boltzmann and fluid equations; plasma properties, including Debye length, quasineutrality, and sheaths; basic collisional properties, including Coulomb and polarization scattering; analysis of capacitive and wave-heated plasma processing reactors.

Topic 20: Plasma Processing of Semiconductors II: Plasma chemistry and equilibrium; analysis of molecular collisions; chemical kinetics and surface processes; plasma discharge particle and energy balance; analysis of inductive and DC plasma processing reactors; plasma etching, deposition, and implantation.

Topic 21: Submicron Device Physics and Techniques:

Topic 22: Semiconductor Microlithography:

Topic 23: Semiconductor Heterostructures:

Topic 24: Microwave Devices:

Topic 25: Organic and Polymer Semiconductor Devices:

Topic 26: Microelectromechanical Systems:

Topic 27: Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors:

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17345 Syllabus Books MW 02:00PM-03:30PM ENS 145 Dodabalapur, Ananth

EE 396V: LASER AND OPTICAL ENGINEERING

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

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17348 Syllabus Books TTH 05:00PM-06:30PM ENS 126 Bank, Seth

EE 396V: PHYS PRINS OF ELECTRONIC MATLS

Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.

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17350 Syllabus Books MW 09:30AM-11:00AM ENS 126 Tutuc, Emanuel

EE 197C: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

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17355 Syllabus Books      

EE 297C: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17360 Syllabus Books      

EE 397C: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17365 Syllabus Books      

EE 697C: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17370 Syllabus Books      

EE 997C: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17375 Syllabus Books      

EE 197G: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17380 Syllabus Books      

EE 297G: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17385 Syllabus Books      

EE 397G: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17390 Syllabus Books      

EE 697G: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17395 Syllabus Books      

EE 997G: RESEARCH PROBLEMS

Problem selected by the student with approval of the department. For each semester hour of credit earned, the equivalent of one lecture hour a week for one semester. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser.

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17400 Syllabus Books      

EE 397K: ADV ORAL COMM INTL ENGR STU

Selection of topics based on needs of an adequate number of students. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Conference Course: May be repeated for credit.

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17405   Books TTH 02:00PM-03:30PM ECJ 5.418 KOZUH, G

EE 397K: ADV WRITTEN COMM INTL ENGR STU

Selection of topics based on needs of an adequate number of students. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Conference Course: May be repeated for credit.

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17410   Books TTH 11:00AM-12:30PM ECJ 5.418 KOZUH, G

EE 397K: 1-CONFERENCE COURSE

Selection of topics based on needs of an adequate number of students. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor.

Topic 1: Conference Course: May be repeated for credit.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17415 Syllabus Books      

EE 397M: GRADUATE RESEARCH INTERNSHIP

Research associated with enrollment in the Graduate Research Internship Program (GRIP). Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of instructor.

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17420 Syllabus Books      

EE 698A: THESIS

No course description found.

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17425 Syllabus Books      

EE 698B: THESIS

No course description found.

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17430 Syllabus Books      

EE 398R: MASTER'S REPORT

Preparation of a report to fulfill the requirement for the master's degree under the report option. The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

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17435 Syllabus Books      

EE 398R: MASTER'S REPORT-ICS

Preparation of a report to fulfill the requirement for the master's degree under the report option. The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17440 Syllabus Books      

EE 398R: MASTER'S REPORT-SE

Preparation of a report to fulfill the requirement for the master's degree under the report option. The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in electrical engineering and consent of the graduate adviser.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17445 Syllabus Books      

EE 398T: SUPV TEACHING IN ELEC ENGR

Teaching under close supervision for one semester, attending group meetings or individual consultations, and submitting reports as required. Three lecture hours a week, or the equivalent, for one semester. Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and appointment as a teaching assistant.

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17455 Syllabus Books      

EE 399R: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Admission to candidacy for the doctoral degree.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17460 Syllabus Books      

EE 699R: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Admission to candidacy for the doctoral degree.

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17465 Syllabus Books      

EE 999R: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Admission to candidacy for the doctoral degree.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17470 Syllabus Books      

EE 399W: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 399R, 699R, or 999R.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17475 Syllabus Books      

EE 699W: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 399R, 699R, or 999R.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17480 Syllabus Books      

EE 999W: DISSERTATION

Offered on the credit/no credit basis only. Prerequisite: Electrical Engineering 399R, 699R, or 999R.

Unique Syllabus Books Days Time Room Instructor
17485 Syllabus Books