General Info: ECE Graduate Studies
The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) offers graduate study leading to the Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees. In Fall 2005, there were 539 graduate students enrolled in the ECE department: 114 M.S. students and 425 Ph.D. students. The department's research and educational activities can be broadly divided into two areas:
(i) Information Sciences and Systems with concentration possible in:
- Communications and Signal Processing( random processes; detectionand estimation; coding and information theory; digital signal processing; visual and audio signal processing; signal compression; communication networks; wireless and cellular systems; satellite communications, information security and forensics );
- Computer Engineering( computer architecture; VLSI design; embedded systems; computer-aided design; compiler technology; computer security; parallel and distributed computing; operating systems; software engineering; hardware/software co-design );
- Controls( adaptive control; intelligent control; stochastic control; robust control; control of bifurcations and chaos; geometric control theory and robotics; control of discrete event systems; smart structure control; numerical optimization; control applications, including biomedical );
and (ii) Electronic Sciences and Devices with concentration possible in:
- Electrophysics( physical principles of wireless communications; electromagnetic theory; antennas and radio wave propagation; intense charged-particle beams and applications to accelerators; relativistic electronics and high-power microwave generation; high power microwave components; nonlinear dynamics and chaos; microwave effects in computer systems; plasmas; quantum electronics; millimeter waves; optical engineering; lasers; nonlinear optics; ultrafast optoelectronics; femtosecond phenomena; RF photonics; optical-microwave interaction; optoelectronic devices, integration, assembly and packaging; photonic networks for computing and communication; optical communications; optical control of phased array antennas; chemical physics and biophysics );
- Microelectronics( device and circuit modeling; semiconductor materials and devices; nanoscale and quantum effect devices and systems; compound semiconductor devices; wide band gap materials and devices, and optoelectronic applications; technology and applications of ion beams; Si based molecular beam epitaxy; biologically inspired sensory motor systems; neural network realizations; semistate theory of circuits; analog and mixed signal VLSI; circuit design and automated testing; Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) devices, materials, and technologies ).
Joint programs are maintained with other departments within the Clark School of Engineering, the Mathematics, Physics and Computer Science departments, as well as with the Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics , the Institute for Systems Research , the Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS) , the Institute for Physical Science and Technology, the Engineering Research Center, the Center for Superconductivity Research, the Laboratory for Physical Sciences and the Chemical Physics and Transportation Programs. Opportunities also exist for programs of study in conjunction with many national and international laboratories and technical facilities.
The department is equipped with an extensive computer facility consisting of a variety of state-of-the art mainframes, workstations, and personal computers located in several open laboratories and in a large number of specialized research laboratories. The faculty members and students affiliated with the Institute for Advanced Computer Studies have access to a Connection Machine that is housed in that institute. In addition, there are more than thirty specialized research laboratories supporting activities in speech and image processing, communication networks, robotics, control systems, system and computer architecture, VLSI design and testing, semiconductor materials and devices, MEMS, photonics, fiber optics, microwave sources, ion beam lithography, and plasma science, among others. A complete engineering library is housed nearby.
In addition to the general M.S. and Ph.D. programs, our department offers a cross-disciplinary M.S. program in Telecommunications (ENTS) and participates in a Professional Master of Engineering program (ENPM). In both of these programs, classes meet in the evening only. For details on the ENTS program, please contact Professor S. Tretter, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland , College Park , Maryland 20742 , (301) 405-8189. For details on the ENPM Program, please contact Professor Syrmos, College of Engineering , University of Maryland , College Park , Maryland 20742 , (301) 405-0362.
For further information please visit us at www.ece.umd.edu or by email at enee-grad@deans.umd.edu. You may also contact our Graduate Studies Office at 301-405-3681.
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