Graduate studies in ECE are broad and encompass many diverse areas such as computers and digital systems, control, communications, electronics, signal processing, electromagnetics, electro-optics, ...
Integrated Circuits and Systems, Memory-Centric Computing, Analog Mixed-Signal and Digital VLSI, Hardware Accelerator, Alternative Computing, Brain-Inspired and Neuromorphic computing, Machine ...
ECE Prof. Kaustav Banerjee elected by the Japan Society of Applied Physics (JSAP) as a 2024 JSAP Fellow International Kaustav Banerjee has been elected for his "contributions to nanoelectronics design ...
ECE Assoc. Prof. Zheng Zhang among four potentially high-impact projects seeking to solve critical energy-efficiency challenges have been awarded more than $240,000 in cumulative funding related to ...
Postdoc Chunfeng Cui and her supervisor Prof. Zheng Zhang receive a best paper award from IEEE Transactions Components, Packaging and Manufacturing Technology The editors of the journal selected Cui’s ...
ECE Prof. Mark Rodwell and Samsung demonstrate a 6G terahertz wireless communication prototype. The demonstration explored the potential of THz spectrum application for 6G wireless communications.
ECE’s Galan Moody receives the award in support of his effort to develop a new quantum photonic platform that allows for chip-scale quantum information processing with light With an ability to analyze ...
Thirty years ago, UCSB inventors had no clear path for taking ideas to the marketplace. Now they do. Here’s how it happened. There is no definitive starting point for entrepreneurship at UC Santa ...
ECE Profs. Galan Moody and John Bowers and others from Caltech, MIT, UVA, and Nexus Photonics receive a nearly $10M grant from the DoD through DARPA to develop next-gen optical detectors From the COE ...
Profs. U. Mishra, S. DenBaars & S. Nakamura part of the history of UCSB's Material Research Lab's Interdisciplinary Research Groups Excerpt from the article in The COE/CLS Convergence magazine (Fall ...
Thirty years ago, UCSB inventors had no clear path for taking ideas to the marketplace. Now they do. Here's how it happened. (York, Culler, Bowers, Jerphagnon) ...