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Paul Nelson, MS Prof. Paul Nelson comes to us with extensive industry experience. Prof. Nelson was a project leader/hardware firmware designer at AT&T Bell Laboratories for over a deacade. While at Bell Labs, he worked on CDMA wireless voice and data hardware and firmware design. He also worked at Dantel Corp as a senior design engineer designing, and developing 68000 based telecommunications circuit boards. Prior to working at Dantel, Prof. Nelson was a microprocessor architect at Intel Corporation. He worked on the specification and validation of the 80960 microprocessor and support chips. Prof. Nelson has also worked at Ball Aerospace Systems as a member of the technical staff working on microprocessor based spacecraft sub systems. Prof. Nelson has over six years of college level teaching experience.
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Manouchehr Ghanevati, Ph.D Dr. Ghanevati’s has extensive background in the design, simulation/modeling, fabrication and measurement of RF/Microwave circuits and antennas for mobile communication systems. Dr. Ghanevati has worked at companies such as Boeing Satellite Systems, Princeton Optronics Systems (PES), and Daryoush Gems. As Senior Staff Engineer at Boeing, Dr. Ghanevati was the responsible engineering authority for K-Band Power Amplifier (PAM) and Beam Forming (BFM) modules for the Spaceway Satellite Program. He also contributed to the qualification of MMIC devices in the Wideband Gapfiller Satellite Program. As Member of the Technical Staff at PES, Dr. Ghanevati was involved in the design and development of RF/Microwave Systems and Optical links. At Daryoush Gems, Dr. Ghanevati worked on various projects involving clock recovery circuits for multi giga-bit/second fiber optic links for the Naval Research Laboratory. Dr. Ghanevati will be a resident faculty member at the Lancaster University Center, mentoring students at the Center and teaching undergraduate and graduate courses in ECE.
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Peter Kinman, PhD Dr. Kinman will join the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in September 2005. His research and academic interests are in radio telemetry and radionavigation for space missions, focusing on problems of radio interference and spectrum management for the space service bands. Dr. Kinman has previously worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, CA as an engineer specializing in radio communications. His research while at Fresno State is sponsored by JPL. .
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