קולוקוויום: Colloquium: Fiber-optic Distributed and Quasi-Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS and Q-DAS) by Avishay Eyal

16 באפריל 2023, 15:00 
206 בנין וולפסון - מכנית  
קולוקוויום: Colloquium: Fiber-optic Distributed and Quasi-Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS and Q-DAS) by Avishay Eyal

 

Electrical Engineering Colloquium 

 

 

Speaker: Prof. Avishay Eyal

Title: Fiber-optic Distributed and Quasi-Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS and Q-DAS)

 

Abstract 

An optical fiber can be described as a glass pipeline which can guide light over great distances with very little loss. In addition to being the central communication channel of the information era, it has another very interesting application. This application is called distributed sensing. By launching into the fiber specially designed pulse sequences of light and analyzing their reflections from different positions along the fiber, it is possible to measure various physical parameters such as temperature, strain and acoustic signals at these positions. During recent years the use of fiber-optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) or Quasi Distributed Acoustic Sensing (Q-DAS) systems has become ubiquitous for a variety of applications. Distributed optical fiber sensors are particularly attractive for marine applications. Facilitating long haul sensing or communications systems in the underwater arena is challenging not only due to the need for underwater compatible sensors but also since conventional wireless communication techniques cannot be used to transmit the measured signals. Distributed fiber-optic sensors perform both tasks with the same medium. In the colloquium I will describe techniques that we have developed in our lab for increasing the bandwidth and sensitivity of DAS and Q-DAS systems and will present results of underwater sensing and underwater acoustic communications.

 

Light refreshments will be served before the lecture

This colloquium is not counted toward seminar credit.

ההרצאה לא מזכה בקרדיט שמיעת סמינרים.

Special Colloquium: "FAST AND FLEXIBLE MULTIAGENT DECISION-MAKING" - Professor Naomi E. Leonard

30 באפריל 2023, 15:00 
011 Electrical Engineering-Classrooms  
Special Colloquium:  "FAST AND FLEXIBLE MULTIAGENT DECISION-MAKING" -  Professor Naomi E. Leonard

 

Electrical Engineering Colloquium 

 

 

Speaker: Professor Naomi E. Leonard, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Director, Council on Science and Technology, Princeton University

 

Prof. Leonard is a MacArthur Fellow, an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and winner of the 2023 IEEE Control Systems Award.
 

Title: FAST AND FLEXIBLE MULTIAGENT DECISION-MAKING

 

Abstract: I will present new theory and methodology for understanding and designing fast and flexible decision-making behavior for a group of agents that observe or communicate over a network. Our model-free theory shows how agreement and disagreement behaviors that capture real-world multiagent decision-making emerge through a bifurcation in which indecision is destabilized. To realize and study these behaviors, we define analytically tractable dynamics that are equivalent to classic linear opinion dynamics with a saturation applied to the exchanges of opinion states. We prove the role of network structure in the bifurcation point, the post-bifurcation opinion patterns, and the sensitivity of the bifurcation to the distribution of inputs over the network. With the additional coupling of state-feedback dynamics for the attention agents pay to their observations, the model admits tunably fast and flexible network behavior in the face of changing environmental conditions. I will demonstrate with applications to multi-robot teams.

 

This is joint work with Anastasia Bizyaeva and Alessio Franci and based on the papers:

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9736598   

https://arxiv.org/abs/2206.14893

https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.01642

 

Short bio: Naomi Ehrich Leonard is Edwin S. Wilsey Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and associated faculty in Applied and Computational Mathematics at Princeton University.  She is also Director of Princeton’s Council on Science and Technology and Founding Editor of the Annual Review of Control, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems. She received her BSE in Mechanical Engineering from Princeton University and her PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of Maryland.  She is a MacArthur Fellow, elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and winner of the 2023 IEEE Control Systems Award. Leonard is Fellow of SIAM, IEEE, IFAC, and ASME.  Her current research focuses on dynamics, control, and learning for multi-agent systems on networks with application to multi-robot teams, collective animal behavior, and other networked systems in nature, technology, and the arts. 

 

Light refreshments will be served before the lecture

This colloquium is not counted toward seminar credit.

ההרצאה לא מזכה בקרדיט שמיעת סמינרים.

סמינר LMI -מרכז אור וחומר מארח את Prof. Prineha Narang

04 באפריל 2023, 13:00 
הפקולטה להנדסה אוניברסיטת תל אביב, בנין כיתות ,אולם 011  
 סמינר  LMI -מרכז אור וחומר מארח את Prof. Prineha Narang

 

LMI Seminar:

"Ab initio approaches to correlated light-matter interactions“

Prof. Prineha Narang

University of California, Los Angeles

Tuesday  April  4th,  2022

13:00-14:00

Light refreshments and drinks will be served at 12:30

Auditorium 011, Engineering Classroom Building,  Faculty of Engineering, Tel-Aviv University

 

Abstract: In this talk, I will present a pedagogical introduction of theoretical and computational approaches to describe excited-states in quantum matter, and predicting emergent states created by external drives. Understanding the role of such light-matter interactions in the regime of correlated electronic systems is of paramount importance to fields of study across condensed matter physics and ultrafast dynamics1. The simultaneous contribution of processes that occur on many time and length-scales have remained elusive for state-of-the-art calculations and model Hamiltonian approaches alike, necessitating the development of new methods in computational physics. I will discuss our latest results at the intersection of ab initio cavity quantum-electrodynamics and electronic structure methods to treat electrons, photons and phonons on the same quantized footing, accessing new observables in strong light-matter coupling. Current approximations in the field almost exclusively focus on electronic excitations, neglecting electron-photon effects, for example, thereby limiting the applicability of conventional methods in the study of polaritonic systems, which requires understanding the coupled dynamics of electronic spins, nuclei, phonons and photons. With our approach we can access correlated electron-photon and photon-phonon dynamics2–7, essential to our latest work on driving quantum systems far out-of-equilibrium to control the coupled electronic and vibrational degrees-of-freedom 8–20. In the second part of my talk, I will demonstrate how the same approach can be generalized in the context of control of molecular quantum matter and quantum transduction. As a first example, I will discuss a cavity-mediated approach to break the inversion symmetry allowing for highly tunable even-order harmonic generation (e.g. second- and fourth-harmonic generation) naturally forbidden in such systems. This relies on a quantized treatment of the coupled light-matter system, similar to the driven case, where the molecular matter is confined within an electromagnetic environment and the incident (pump) field is treated as a quantized field in a coherent state. When the light-molecule system is strongly coupled, it leads to two important features: (i) a controllable strong-coupling-induced symmetry breaking, and (ii) a tunable and highly efficient nonlinear conversion efficiency of the harmonic generation processes 21–23. Both of these have implications for molecular quantum architectures. Being able to control molecules at a quantum level gives us access to degrees of freedom such as the vibrational or rotational degrees to the internal state structure. Finally, I will give an outlook on connecting ideas in cavity control of molecules with quantum information science.

 

Technical Project Manager

More than 5 years’ experience in working on complex multidisciplinary projects

Software Engineering manager

  • Computer Science, Software Engineering, Electrical engineering B.Sc or MSc. + 5 years (minimum) hands-on experience in software development

Global Product Support Team Leader (GPS)

  • Minimum 3 years’ experience in technical positions in the high-tech industry (Semiconductors – an advantage)
  • Experience in customer facing position (Product support – an advantage)

עמודים

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