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E-BULLETIN
UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
July 12,
2006
DEAN'S
LETTER
Though we are proud of the strong tradition of excellence we have
built since the School was established in 1945, today we are engaged
in an extraordinarily exciting period of renewal and transformation.
We continue to reflect upon how we can best fulfill our mission
as a leader in research, education and community service.
Our School has been experiencing significant changes
in the physical sense, as well as in terms of our ongoing commitment
to excellence in education and research. Along Portola Way on
campus, our Engineering 1 replacement building is every day looking
closer to completion. This coming year, we will open the new building
with pride. Even as we celebrate, however, we already are looking
toward the day when we can begin a second building, which will
include some very important additions – a distance learning
center and auditorium, as well as other cutting-edge research
facilities. As well, later this summer, our Center for Embedded
Networked Sensing will be moving into their interactive new facility
at the School.
In a less physical sense, we also are building
upon our undergraduate education initiatives. Committed to providing
our students with a broad and practical engineering education,
we have made some key revisions to our curriculum to emphasize
its breadth and depth. To help our students fulfill their educational
goals, we also are pursuing additional endowed scholarships and
fellowships.
To make certain our students are receiving the
best possible instruction, we also continue to work to attract
the nation's best teachers and researchers. The School has recently
hired a number of new faculty, and as the details are finalized,
I will be talking more about the new members of our teaching family
in an upcoming E-Bulletin. Our aim is to recruit a diverse and
gifted faculty essential for providing students with world-class
instruction and research opportunities.
Although summer has begun and the halls across
the UCLA campus are quieter, we are still in full swing here at
the School, planning and working toward our exceptional future.
Sincerely,

Vijay K. Dhir
Dean
FEATURE STORIES
Researchers at UCLA Engineering Announce Breakthrough
in Silicon Photonics Devices
Building on a series of recent breakthroughs in silicon photonics,
researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and
Applied Science have developed a novel approach to silicon devices
that combines light amplification with a photovoltaic –
or solar panel – effect. To read more, click
here.
UCLA Alumnus and Google VP Vinton Cerf
Advises Engineering Grads: “Don’t Be Afraid of Failure”
Nearly 6,500 guests and students from the UCLA Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science gathered at commencement to
hear the address of Internet pioneer and Google vice president
Vinton G. Cerf. Widely known as a “father of the Internet,”
Cerf encouraged graduates to "find an engineering career
that you truly love. Such work can nourish and sustain in ways
that must be experienced to appreciate." To read more, click
here.
OTHER NEWS
Revisions Strengthen, Broaden Undergraduate Curriculum
Beginning Fall 2006, a revised curriculum will better prepare
UCLA engineering graduates for a rapidly evolving workplace. Each
of the School’s seven departments has structured their programs
to focus on future technologies and innovations in their respective
fields, while emphasizing a solid understanding of fundamental
disciplines such as math, the basic sciences, and the humanities.
To read more, click
here.
Engineering Faculty and Staff Win Awards,
Honors
Rick Ainsworth, director of UCLA
Engineering’s Center for Excellence in Engineering and Diversity,
has been selected to receive an award from the UCLA Academic Senate
Committee on Diversity and Equal Opportunity. Awards are given
by the committee every other year, based on contributions “beyond
the call of duty” involving leadership, innovation, initiatives,
or creativity in furthering a fair, open and diverse academic
environment at UCLA.
Abeer Alwan, professor of electrical
engineering, has received a prestigious Radcliffe Institute for
Advanced Study Fellowship. She is one of only two engineers selected
for the fellowship, which is awarded to 50 chosen academics.
Yoram Cohen, professor of chemical
and biomolecular engineering, has been elected as vice-chair of
the Separations Division of the American Institute of Chemical
Engineers. He will succeed as the chair of the Division in 2008.
Thomas Hahn, professor of mechanical
and aerospace engineering, was designated as a Centennial Fellow
of the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics at Penn
State University at the recent Centennial Celebration of the Department
in June. The designation recognizes his distinguished achievements
throughout his career.
Yu Huang, professor of materials
science and engineering, has been chosen to receive a “Nano
50” Innovator Award. The Nano 50™ Awards, presented
by Nanotech Briefs magazine, recognize the top 50 technologies,
products, and innovators that have significantly impacted, or
are expected to impact, the state of the art in nanotechnology.
Innovators are individuals recognized as a leader or pioneer in
a specific area of nanotechnology, with a significant background
of accomplishments in advancing the state of the art in nanotechnology.
The Nano 50 awards will be presented at a special reception and
awards dinner during NASA Tech Briefs National Nano Engineering
Conference in Boston, Mass., in November.
Leonard Kleinrock, professor
of computer science, delivered a lecture on the future of the
Internet at the University of Trento, Italy, in June.
MEDIA WATCH:
UCLA ENGINEERING NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
EE Times
Silicon
laser harnessed
Continuous-wave silicon lasers were demonstrated for the first
time last year by Intel Corp. But the new lasers generated too
much heat to be practical for CMOS devices. Researchers at the
University of California at Los Angeles School of Engineering
now claim to have the solution: Harness the excess energy with
a photovoltaic effect that converts heat back into electricity
to power the chip.
United Press International
UCLA
creates new silicon photonics devices
U.S. scientists say they have developed a novel approach to silicon
devices that combines light amplification with a photovoltaic
effect. Building on a series of recent breakthroughs in silicon
photonics, UCLA Engineering researchers say they determined not
only can optical amplification in silicon be achieved with zero
power consumption, but power can be generated in the process.
Photonics.com
New
Approach Announced in Si Photonic Devices
A new approach to silicon photonic devices that combines light
amplification with a photovoltaic, or solar, effect to generate
power was announced today at the 2006 International Optical Amplifiers
and Applications Conference in Vancouver. At the conference, researchers
from the University of California, Los Angeles Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science – the same group that
demonstrated the first silicon laser in 2004 – reported
that silicon Raman amplifiers possess nonlinear photovoltaic properties,
a phenomenon related to power generation in solar cells.
Engineer Online (UK)
Silicon
Photonics Breakthrough
Researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and
Applied Science have developed a novel approach to silicon devices
that combines light amplification with a photovoltaic - or solar
panel - effect.
UCLA Today
Tip
of the Cap!
Nearly 6,500 guests and students from the UCLA Henry Samueli School
of Engineering and Applied Science heard Internet pioneer/Google
vice president Vinton G. Cerf (pictured with Dean Vijay K. Dhir)
tease, “If you are going to screw up in engineering, try
to do it big time.” Consider the Tower of Pisa, he told
them playfully. “The results will become a tourist attraction
in the centuries to come and therefore contribute to the general
economic welfare of the local population, if not to the reputation
of the engineering profession.”
UCLA Magazine
Don’t
go out of the water
It turns out that the kid-friendly conditions at Mother's Beach
and other similarly sheltered beaches in Southern California might
be just as appealing to some potentially harmful bacteria. That
not-so-sunny news arrives in the form of a recent study by researchers
at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
that tested the sediments in the surf (the hard-packed sand under
the frothy, churned-up water at the beach’s edge).
UCLA Magazine
Water
Warriors
RO desalination is the state-of-the-art technology for turning
seawater and brackish water into fresh drinking water. But the
process is still too problematic to be practical and economical
for the parched masses. If we're going to meet the needs of a
thirsty planet, we'll look to scientists like 53-year-old chemical
and biomolecular engineering professor Yoram Cohen to help do
it.
Reuters newswire
South
San Andreas fault set for huge quake – study
The southern end of the San Andreas fault near Los Angeles, which
has not had a major rupture for more than 300 years, is under
immense stress and could produce a massive earthquake. "This
is new evidence that tells us the same story that we have known
for a while," said Scott Brandenberg, a professor at the
University of California, Los Angeles school of engineering. "It's
a reminder that we need to be ready for it when it happens."
USA Today
Research
explores data mining, privacy
As new disclosures mount about government surveillance programs,
computer science researchers hope to wade into the fray by enabling
data mining that also protects individual privacy. A University
of California, Los Angeles professor, Rafail Ostrovsky, said the
CIA and the National Security Agency are evaluating a program
of his that would let intelligence analysts search huge batches
of intercepted communications for keywords and other criteria,
while discarding messages that don't apply.
MSNBC
Encryption allows
for security and privacy
As new disclosures mount about government surveillance programs,
computer science researchers hope to wade into the fray by enabling
data mining that also protects individual privacy. A University
of California, Los Angeles professor, Rafail Ostrovsky, said the
CIA and the National Security Agency are evaluating a program
of his that would let intelligence analysts search huge batches
of intercepted communications for keywords and other criteria,
while discarding messages that don't apply.
Forbes
Research
Explores Data Mining, Privacy
As new disclosures mount about government surveillance programs,
computer science researchers hope to wade into the fray by enabling
data mining that also protects individual privacy. A University
of California, Los Angeles professor, Rafail Ostrovsky, said the
CIA and the National Security Agency are evaluating a program
of his that would let intelligence analysts search huge batches
of intercepted communications for keywords and other criteria,
while discarding messages that don't apply.
San Jose Mercury News
Research
explores data mining, privacy
As new disclosures mount about government surveillance programs,
computer science researchers hope to wade into the fray by enabling
data mining that also protects individual privacy. A University
of California, Los Angeles professor, Rafail Ostrovsky, said the
CIA and the National Security Agency are evaluating a program
of his that would let intelligence analysts search huge batches
of intercepted communications for keywords and other criteria,
while discarding messages that don't apply.
The Daily Bruin
Final
Reflections: Leader plans to further study national security and
WMDs
It may be hard to associate the grim issues of war and nuclear
weapons with rosy-cheeked Albert Carnesale, but UCLA's chancellor
is among the nation's top experts on nuclear proliferation and
national security. "It is common for most engineering faculty
who receive government grants to be involved on committees that
serve as a sort of 'self-governance' of the programs they are
involved with," said Neil Morley, adjunct associate professor
in the UCLA Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department.
The Daily Bruin
Final
reflections: Building a multidisciplinary legacy
Commentary by Dean Vijay K. Dhir.
Each chancellor who has served UCLA has left behind a unique legacy,
and Albert Carnesale is no exception. As UCLA's eighth chief executive,
Carnesale has left a positive imprint on the campus that will
be felt for years to come.
The Los Angeles Times
Medicine:
A Closer Look: Polluted Sand
UCLA researchers have found that the wet sand of some enclosed,
family-friendly beaches in Southern California may harbor higher
levels of certain bacteria — and by extension certain pathogens
— than unsheltered beaches with better water circulation.
A team led by Jennifer Jay, assistant professor of environmental
engineering, found higher levels of Escherichia coli and enterococci
at two sheltered beaches (the enclosed portion of Cabrillo Beach
in San Pedro, and Mother's Beach in Marina del Rey) than at 11
open beaches in Santa Monica Bay.
MSN Money
Research
Explores Data Mining, Privacy
As new disclosures mount about government surveillance programs,
computer science researchers hope to wade into the fray by enabling
data mining that also protects individual privacy. A University
of California, Los Angeles professor, Rafail Ostrovsky, said the
CIA and the National Security Agency are evaluating a program
of his that would let intelligence analysts search huge batches
of intercepted communications for keywords and other criteria,
while discarding messages that don't apply.
Semiconductor International
Breakthrough
in Spin-Wave Research
Engineers at UCLA's School of Engineering and Applied Science
announced a critical breakthrough in semiconductor spin-wave research.
Engineering adjunct professor Mary Mehrnoosh Eshaghian-Wilner,
researcher Alexander Khitun, and professor Kang Wang have created
three novel nanoscale computational architectures using a technology
they pioneered called "spin-wave buses" as the mechanism
for interconnection. The three nanoscale architectures are not
only power-efficient, but also possess a high degree of interconnectivity.
IEEE Spectrum
Cheap Chips
for Next Wireless Frontier
This month, researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles,
are presenting three key transceiver components built in a widely
available and inexpensive silicon process technology. UCLA electrical
engineering professor Behzad Razavi is taking a different approach
from IBM’s. He’s making key parts of his transmitters
and receivers using 130-nanometer and 90-nm silicon CMOS manufacturing
technology—mature chip-making processes used today to make
microprocessors. “If I can put one antenna on a chip, I
can put on four,” says Razavi.
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