EE 500 M.S. Research and Thesis (Non-credit)
Program of research leading to M.S. degree
arranged between the student and a faculty member. Students register to this
course in all semesters while the research program or write up of thesis is in
progress.Student must start registering to this course no later than the second
semester of his/her M.S. study.
EE 501 Linear Systems Theory I (3-0)3
Linear spaces: fields, linear independence,
basis, direct sum decomposition, normed linear spaces, convergence
concepts, Banach spaces. Linear transformations: null and range spaces,
matrix representation, block diagonal form. Linear transformations defined by
a square matrix characteristic and minimal polynomials, direct sum
decomposition of Cn, Jordan canonical form, functions of a square matrix.
Hilbert spaces: inner product, concept of orthogonality, Hermitian matrices,
projection theorem, systems of linear algebraic equations, general Fourier
series
EE 502 Linear Systems Theory II (3-0)3
Differential equations: existence and
uniqueness, linear differential equations, stability of solutions, variational
equation, periodically time-varying differential equations. Difference
equations. Dynamical system representations: equivalence, linearity,
time-invariance. Differential system representations: impulse response, system
function, stability, algebraic equivalence, duality, controllability,
observability, realizations. Transform techniques.
EE 503 Signal Analysis and Processing (3-0)3
Signal representation and classification.
Deterministic signals. Random signals. Noise. Analytic signal and complex
envelope. Signal processing systems. Signal sampling. Modulation and frequency
translation. Spectrum analysis. Detection and estimation.
EE 504 Adaptive Signal Processing (3-0)3
Overview of discrete-time stochastic
processes. Wiener filter theory. Linear prediction. LMS algorithm and its
variants. Frequency domain adaptive filtering; RLS, QR-RLS algorithms and their
connection to Kalman Filtering. Order recursive adaptive filters; QRD-LSL
algorithm and its variants. Analysis and discussion of adaptation algorithms
and their convergence properties. Computational complexity considerations.
Filter structures and algorithms for fast adaptation and real-time processing.
Numerical stability of fast algorithms. IIR adaptive filters. Applications of
adaptive filtering.
EE 505 Multiresolution Signal Processing (3-0)3
Fundamentals of signal decompositions.
Time-frequency representations. Filter banks. Wavelets. Efficient algorithms.
Signal compression and subband coding.
EE 507 Analog Filters (3-0)3
Review of continuous-time signals and
systems. Concept of filtering. Butterworth, Chebyshev, elliptic, filters., etc.
Frequency transformations. Phase and loss equalizers. Synthesis of passive
filter networks. Active filters. Switched capacitor filters.
EE 508 Digital Filters (3-0)3
Review of discrete-time signals and
systems. Infinite impulse response and finite impulse response digital filter
design techniques. Wave digital filters. Finite wordlength effects.
EE 509 High Frequency Filter Design (2-2)3
Synthesis of lumped element filters. Lumped
element filter design using prototypes. Circuit transformation for realization
of lumped element filters. Synthesis of distributed element filters.
Distributed element filter design using prototypes. Circuit transformation for
realization of distributed element filters.
EE 511 Communication Electronics (3-0)3
Small and large signal HF amplifier design.
HF oscillators. Noise considerations in RF amplifiers. RF amplifiers.
Microstrip and stripline techniques. Transistor and amplifier measurement
techniques. Computer aided design of amplifiers.
Prerequisite: EE 412
EE 512 Introduction to Optical Fiber Communications (3-0)3
Optical propagation in fibers, attenuation,
scattering, dispersion, polarization and non-linear phenomena in trasmission.
Optical sources and optical detectors. Coupling of sources and detectors to
optical fibers, splicing and optical connectors. Non-coherent receivers and
their performance, non-cohorent optical fiber communication systems. Coherent
optical fiber communication systems with heterodyne and homodyne demodulation.
Optical fiber amplifiers, frequency division multiplexing and time division
multiplexing.
EE 513 Transport Phenomena in Semiconductor Devices (3-0)3
Crystal structure and band theory of
electronic conduction, carrier scattering, the Boltzmann Transport Equation,
low and high field transport in GaAs, InP and other III-V compounds, properties
of interest for device applications, semiclassical nonstationary charge
transport models, submicron device modeling and simulation techniques, Monte
Carlo simulations.
EE 515 Bioelectricity and Biomagnetism (3-0)3
Vector analysis. Electrical sources and fields.
Introduction to membrane biophysics. Action potentials. Volume conductor
fields. Electrophysiology of the heart. Electrocardiography (ECG). Electric and
magnetic lead fields. Electroencephalography (EEG). Magnetoencephalography
(MEG).
EE 517 Therapeutic and Prosthetic Devices in Biomedical Engineering (3-0)3
Cardiovascular instrumentation, prosthesis
and assist devices. Neuromuscular prosthetics and orthotics. Respiratory
therapy equipment and instrumentation. Anaesthesia delivery apparatus and
applications. Sensory communication aids. Internal prosthetic and orthotics.
Electrosurgery and related equipment. Instrumentation related to metabolic
systems. Medical imaging systems. Radiation therapy.
EE 518 Physiological Control Systems Analysis (3-0)3
Definition of and examples on homeostasis.
Body fluid compartments and compartmental analysis. Models of the
cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Hormonal control mechanisms. Neutral
control mechanisms. Regulation of body fluid volumes and electrolytes.
Mathematical modelling, simulation and identification of physiological systems;
associated numerical methods.
EE 519 Medical Imaging (3-0)3
Physical principles of x-Ray NMR,
ultrasound and nuclear imaging as applied to medicine. Mathematical formulation
of the imaging problem for these modalities. Backprojection, convolution,
Fourier and Algebraic techniques of image reconstruction. Data acquisition
techniques and hardware considerations. New imaging modalities and application
areas.
EE 521 Analytical Methods for Electromagnetics (3-0)3
Sturm-Liouville problems, one dimensional
Green's functions in closed form and in eigenfunction series, separation of
variables, higher dimensional Green's function in rectangular, cylindirical and
spherical coordinates, relation with the solution of EM related inhomogeneous
partial differential equations, Watson transformation, plane-wave spectrum
representations, the T-Matrix method, vector wave functions, dyadic Green's
functions in closed form and wave function expansions.
EE 522 Numerical Methods for Electromagnetics (3-0)3
Numerical solution of matrix equations and
matrix eigenvaluen problems. Method of moments. Finite difference and finite
element methods. Variational methods. Spectral domain approach. The use of
above methods in the solution of various antenna and scattering problems, and
in the analysis of passive microwave components.
EE 523 Electromagnetic Wave Theory (3-0)3
Fundamental concepts and theorems. Plane
wave functions; modal expansion. Cylindrical wave functions. Spherical wave
functions. Wave transformations.
EE 524 Electromagnetic Wave Propagation (3-0)3
Wave propagation fundamentals. Ground wave
propagation; spherical earth problem. Tropospheric propagation; troposcatter
systems, iono-spheric propagation. Measurement and modelling of environmental
noise. Antenna noise temperature.
EE 525 Antenna Engineering (3-0)3
Review of field equivalence principles,
surface wave antennas, microstrip antenna elements and arrays, broadband
antennas, introduction to reflector antenna systems, smooth walled and
corrugated horns.
EE 526 Antenna Theory (3-0)3
Induced current and aperture integration
formulations, the Huygens-Fresnel principle, geometrical optics, the plane wave
spectrum representation, fast analysis of aperture type antennas, fast and slow
wave structures, array analysis and synthesis techniques.
EE 527 Microwave Engineering (3-0)3
Matrix representation of microwave
networks. Properties of scattering parameters. Generalized scattering
parameters. Microwave transistor amplifier design; gain stability, noise.
Microwave transistor oscillator and mixer design. Simplified signal flow graph
analysis. Coupled lines, directional coupler, Schiffman's differential phase
shifter. Hybrids and power dividers. Richard's frequency: transformation,
Richards' theorem. Kuroda's identifies.
EE 528 Microwave Theory (3-0)3
Microwave classic filter design.
Generalized coupled line analysis. Coupled line equivalent circuits. Exact
microwave filter synthesis. Analysis of arbitrary connected microwave networks.
Sensitivity analysis of microwave circuits. Theory of broad-band matching.
EE 531 Probability and Stochastic Processes(3-0)3
Review of probability theory and random
variables. Sequence of random variables, convergence concepts. Stochastic
processes: correlation and power spectra, stationarity, linear systems with
random inputs, second order processes; stochastic continuity, differentiation
and integration in quadratic mean; Gaussian processes; Poisson processes, shot
noise; Markow processes; orthogonal expansions, least mean square error
estimation.
EE 533 Information Theory (3-0)3
Mathematical analysis of discrete and
continuous information sources and communication channels. Concepts of mutual
information and entropy as mathematical measures for sources and channels.
Introduction to rate distortion theory. Channel capacity, source and channel
coding theorems.
EE 534 Coding Theory (3-0)3
The arithmetic of Galois fields. Linear
block codes with particular emphasis on cyclic codes, such as BCH and RS codes.
Convolutional codes. Efficient decoding algorithms for block and convolutional
codes. Concatenation and interleaving of codes.
EE 535 Communication Theory (3-0)3
Detection theory: binary M-ary hypothesis
testing. Estimation theory. Representation of stochastic processes:
Karhunen-Loeve expansion. Detection and estimation of signal parameters in
white and colored noise. Estimation of continuous waveforms. Optimum linear
realizable processor: Wiener-Hopf equation and its solution.
EE 536 Digital Communication Systems (3-0)3
Baseband pulse transmission. Modulation of
digital signals: ASK, FSK, PSK, OAM, OPSK, MSK systems. Equalizers. Carrier and
bit synchronization.
EE 538 Telecommunication Networks (3-0)3
Overview of existing analog and digital
telephone networks. Review of voice digitization, digital transmission and
multiplexing. Digital Switching. Network spnchronization. Control and
Management. Fundamentals of fiber optic transmission systems. Data and
Integrated services digital networks (ISDN). Traffic analysis.
EE 542 Computer Networks (3-0)3
The layered architecture, Local Area
Networks, data link protocols, error correction with FEC and ARQ, routing, flow
control, transport protocols, application layer protocols, recent subjects in
networking.
EE 543 Neurocomputers (3-0)3
Introduction, computer models of neuron.
Supervized and unsupervized learning, Hopfield nets, Perceptrons. Backprogation
learning algorithms. Self organization and memories. Neurocomputing for pattern
recognition, expert systems, and optimization problems. Analogy between
Neurocomputers and computation in Cerebral Cortex. Characteristic differences
between Digital and Neurocomputers.
EE 544 Algorithms and Computational Complexity (3-0)3
Introduction to algorithms and
computational complexity, how to compare the rates of growth of functions,
recurrence relations, recursive algorithms, polynomial time algorithms and
class P, Turing machines, intractable problems and the class NP, Reducability,
NP completeness, Cook's theorem, Backtracking, Approximate algorithms for hard
problems.
EE 545 Switching and Automata Theory I (3-0)3
Sequential machine theory.
Hartmanis-Stearns algebraic theory of sequential machines. Regular expressions.
Decomposition theory. Linear sequential machines. Probabilistic automata. Fault
detection experiments.
EE 546 Switching and Automata Theory II (3-0)3
Information lossless machines. Codes.
Unique decodability. Introduction to formal languages. Context-free and
context-sensitive languages. Turing machines. Computability; decidability;
unsolvability.
Prerequisite: EE 545
EE 547 Parallel Computer Architectures (3-0)3
Multiprocessors, interconnection schemes,
shared memory vs. distributed systems, granularity, cache coherence,
synchronization, pipelined processors, process creation and switching problems,
load balancing, automatic detection of parallelism.
EE 548 Microprocessors and Applications (3-0)3
Intel 8086 microprocessor, 8087 and 8089
coprocessors, Intel 80286 microprocessor, pipelined execution, Motorola 68020
microprocessor, coprocessors of 68020, architecture of intel 80386, 80486 and
860 microprocessor, transputer.
EE 549 Parallel and Distributed Computing (3-0)3
Parallel and distributed architectures:
models and complexity measures, communication aspects, synchronization issues.
Synchronous algorithms: algorithms for systems of linear equations, direct and
iterative methods, nonlinear problems, shortest paths and dynamic programming.
Totally and partially asynchronous algorithms. Organization of asynchronous
network of processors: termination detection, snap-shosts, synchronization
using rollback, asynchronous simulation, maintaining communication with a
center.
EE 551 Multivariable Control Systems I (3-0)3
State space characterization of linear
multivariable systems. Concepts of controllability, observability and
stability. Structural equivalence. Luenberger canonical forms. State feedback
and pole placement. Design of observers. Dynamic output feedback. Strong
observability. A survey of current research topics in control science.
EE 552 Multivariable Control Systems II (3-0)3
System models; system matrices; decoupling
zeros; standard forms of system matrices. Stability and design of multivariable
control systems using frequency domain methods: Inverse Nyquist array and
characteristic loci design techniques, and their applications to industrial
plants. A survey of current research topics in multivariable control systems.
EE 553 Optimization (3-0)3
Mathematical preliminaries on functions of
several variables. Convexity and convex functions. Unconstrained minimization
problems. Computational algorithms such as steepest descent, Newton and quasi-Newton methods.
Constrained minimization problems and Kuhn-Tucker theory. Fundamental theorems
of linear optimization and the simplexs algorithm.
EE 554 Optimal Control Theory (3-0)3
Examples of optimal control problems.
Calculus of variations and necessary conditions of optimality. Pontryagin's
maximum principle. Minimum time and minimum energy problems. Linear-quadratic
optimal control problems. Computational algorithms such as steepest descent,
variation of extremals, quasilinearization.
EE 555 Stability Theory of Dynamical Systems (3-0)3
Review of dynamical system models,
classification of equilibrium solution. Results on 2-dimensional systems;
Poincare-Bendixon theory for limit cycles. Liapunov theory; definitions of
stability and applications to linear and nonlinear feedback systems.
Input/output stability; definitions and derivation of frequency response
criteria for stability.
EE 557 Estimation Theory (3-0)3
Gauss-Markov process and stochastic
differential equations. Bayesian estimation theory. Maximum likelihood, linear
minimum variance and least-square estimations. Properties of estimators; error
analysis. State estimation for linear systems, Kalman-Bucy and Wiener filters.
Smoothing and prediction. Nonlinear estimation. Filter implementation.
Applications to communication, control, system identification and biomedical
engineering.
EE 558 System Identification and Adaptive Control (3-0)3
System models: internal and external
representations. Volterra and Wiener characterizations for nonlinear systems.
Explicit and implicit system identification. Use of periodic test signals,
binary m-sequences. On-line parameter identification; stochastic approximation,
random search algorithm and the extended Kalman filter. The linear quadratic
Gaussian optimal control problem. Various adaptive control strategies.
Stability considerations. Learning and hierarchical intelligent control
systems, bionic systems, man-machine control systems.
EE 559 Intelligent Control (3-0)3
Uncertainty models and information
representation: types of uncertainties and uncertainty measures. Intelligent
control methodologies: learning control, fuzzy control, neurocontrol.
EE 561 Advanced Static Power Conversion (3-0)3
Overloaded modes of operation of
rectifiers, characteristics. Reactive power and harmonics in ac-dc converters,
cascade use of converters. Commutation techniques in inverters; McMurray
circuit and its modified forms, voltage control and harmonic elimination. ASCII
inverters. Chopper structures; improving the performance, optimization of
circuit elements.
EE 563 Generalized Electrical Machine Theory (3-0)3
Some basic concepts of electrical machines.
Generalized machine concept. Transformation in circuits and machines. Matrix
equation of electrical machines. Measurement of machine parameters. Methods of
solution and computation. Steady state, transient, balanced and unbalanced
operations. Approximate models of electrical machines. Small oscillations.
Applications.
EE 564 Design of Electrical Machines (3-0)3
Induction machine: Classification, design
principles, electric and magnetic loading, determination of dimensions,
selection of slot numbers, reduction of parasitic torques, windings,
calculation of parameters. Synchronous machine design: determination of
dimensions and winding details, determination of characteristic curves and
terminal voltage. Optimum design of induction and synchronous machines.
Transformer design.
EE 566 Electrical Heating and Applications (3-0)3
Review of heat transfer theory. Electrical
phenomena related to furnaces. Types and classification of electric furnaces
and applications. Arc furnaces: basic structures,cooperational principles, the
arc furnace as a load on the network. The theory of induction heating.
Induction melting, through heating and hardening installations. Static power
sources for induction furnaces. Economics of induction heating.
EE 568 Selected Topics on Electrical Machines (3-0)3
Varying subjects in line with modern
practice. Stepping motors; types, excitation schemes, characteristics,
definitions and terminology. Static torque characteristics. Position error
under load, single step response, damping, determination of pull-out torque
characteristics. Stepping motor drive circuits. Open and closed loop control.
Stepping motor selection. DC servo motors, types, characteristics, drivers,
applications.
EE 569 Special Topics in Power Electronics (3-0)3
Modern power semiconductors
characteristics, trends. Power integrated circuits. AC-to DC converters; unity
power factor converters. DC- to
DC converters; switch mode power converters, resonant converters, DC-to AC
converters; configurations, soft switching, resonant types, pulse width
modulation techniques. A review of selected applications.
EE 571 Wave Propagation in Power Systems (3-0)3
Wave equations. Modelling of aerial lines
and cables. Modal analysis of transmission lines. Power line carrier
communications. Mode coupling. Solution of transmission line transients using
lattice, Fourier transform and time domain methods.
EE 572 Insulation Coordination (3-0)3
Lightning, switching and temporary
overvoltages. Disruptive discharges and withstand voltages. Lightning
performance of transmission lines. Switching surge design. Insulation
coordination of HV substations.
EE 573 Power System Stability and Dynamics (3-0)3
Power system transient and dynamic
stability, stability analysis with classical model, synchronous machine
modeling using Park's equations, multimachine transient stability analysis,
automatic voltage regulators, speed governers and stabilizers.
EE 574 Power System Real-Time Monitoring and Control (3-0)3
Power system real time monitoring and control
problem, Power system computer control centers, Supervisory Data Acquisition
and Control System (SCADA), System control strategies, Control levels. System
security concept, Contingency analysis, Configuration analysis, State
estimation, Decoupled state estimation methods, Detection, identification and
correction of gross measurement errors, Real-time observability analysis.
EE 575 Advanced High Voltage Techniques (3-0)3
Insulation principles in HV equipment.
lightning discharges and overvoltages generated in HV systems. Corona
discharges and corona loss calculations. Electromagnetics interference
generated by HV systems. Pollution flashover problem of HV insulators.
Overvoltage limiting devices, high voltage insulators, bushings and circuit
breakers. Insulation design of high voltage transformers, cables and
capacitors. Testing of HV equipment.
EE 576 High Voltage Measurement Techniques (3-0)3
High voltage cathode-ray-oscillography,
interference problems. Resistive, capacitive and mixed high voltage dividers,
high frequency characteristics. Generating voltmeters. High-ohmic series
resistors. Electrostatic voltmeters. Resonance capacitor transformers and
voltage transformers. Sphere gaps. Peak value and impulse current measurements.
Bridge circuits for dielectric measurements. Detection and measurement of
partial discharges.
EE 577 Advanced Power System Protection (3-0)3
Investigation of current and voltage
waveforms during faults and other conditions. Distance and carrier-aided
distance protection. New protection schemes applicable to high-speed
protection. Digital relaying. Developments in integrated protection, control
and measurement systems.
EE 578 Power System Planning (3-0)3
Power system planning concepts. Load
forecasting. Generation system planning. Electric power generation resources of
Turkey. Transmission planning.
Engineering, economics and feasibility studies.
EE 579 Economic Operation of Power Systems (3-0)3
Modern power system operation, economic
dispatch, transmission losses, linear and nonlinear programming techniques,
unit commitment, hydrothermal coordination, interchange evaluation, power
system security and rescheduling.
EE 583 Pattern Recognition (3-0)3
Introduction to machine perception, Bayes
decision theory. Parameter estimation and supervised learning; nonparametric
techniques. Linear discriminant functions, unsupervised learning and
clustering. Scene analysis, applications of pattern recognition.
EE 586 Artificial Intelligence (3-0)3
Exploiting natural constraints. Problem
solving; Description matching and goal reduction, finding solution paths,
games. Logic. Knowledge representation. Natural Language understanding.
Applications of AI.
EE 587 Introduction to Robotics (3-0)3
Evolution of robots, elements of robotic
systems, mathematics of manipulators, homogeneous transformations, endeffector
position and orientation, kinematics, inverse kinematics, differential changes,
task planning and path planning. Manipulator dynamics.
EE 588 Robot Hand: Dynamics of Manipulation(3-0)3
Tree-structured manipulators. Multiple
manipulators. Leading robot hands. Hand gross motion control. Obstacle
avoidance techniques. Collision free wrist path planning. Hand preshape
analysis. Grasp planning. Contact analysis. Hand fine motion control.
Manipulability; Stability; Compliance.
EE 590 Seminar (0-2)NC
M.S. students working on a common area of
Electrical Engineering choose, study and present a topic to a group under the
guidance of a faculty member. Presentation must reflect the preliminary results
of student’s research work or a literature survey on a topic assigned by the
instructor. Student performance is evaluated according to the style of
presentation and depth of understanding. Student must be registered to the course
EE 500 M.S. Thesis.
EE 600 Ph. D. Research and Thesis (Non-credit)
Program of research leading to Ph. D.
degree arranged between the student and a faculty member. Students register to
this course in all semesters while the research program or write up of thesis
is in progress. Student must start registering to this course no later than the
third semester of his/her Ph. D. study.
EE 601 Functional Analysis and Operator Theory with Applications (3-0)3
Metric spaces, separability and
completeness. Banach's fixed point theorem and its applications. Normed spaces,
linear operators on normed spaces. Inner product spaces and projections.
Approximation theory in normed and inner product spaces.
EE 603 Spectral Estimation (3-0)3
Review of basic concepts. Nonparametric
methods (periodogram and correlogram based methods). Parametric methods for
rational spectra (AR, MA, and ARMA modeling). Parametric methods for line
spectra (models of sinusoidal signals in noise). Spatial methods (MUSIC,
Min-norm, ESPRIT, etc.). Description of the cases that can be handled via the
following approaches: Higher-order statistical analysis, adaptive estimation,
time-frequency analysis.
EE 610 Integrated Sensors and Sensor Systems (3-0)3
Fundamental principles, operation and
design of integrated solid-state sensors and sensing systems. Sensor
technology, including micromachining and wafer bonding. Microstructures for the
measurement of visible and infrared radiation, pressure, acceleration,
temperature, gas purity and ion concentrations. Merged process technologies for
sensors and circuits. Data acquisition circuits and advanced sensing systems.
Microactuators and integrated microsystems.
EE 611 Plasma Engineering (3-0)3
Basic concepts in plasma physics and
gaseous electronics. Formation and heating of the plasma. Possible approaches
to controlled fusion. Introduction to laboratory systems of controlled fusion.
Problems of confinement. Plasma oscillations and diagnostics.
EE 612 Fundamentals of Fusion Plasma Systems (3-0)3
Review of controlled thermonuclear fusion.
Magnetic confinement systems: Tokamak, stellerators, mirror machines, prinches
and plasma focus. Alternative magnetic confinement systems: Compact torus, FRC
and RFP. Inertial confinement: laser fusion systems, electron and ion beam
systems. Concept of fusion reactors.
EE 613 Beam Electronics (3-0)3
Lens theory; electron motion. Electronic
space charge. Analytical determination of electrostatic fields. General
properties of electrostatic lenses. Magnetic electron lenses. Electron guns.
Design consideration for selected beam systems.
EE 614 Principles of Laser Engineering (3-0)3
An introduction to quantum electronics.
Laser plasmas. Laser optics. Principal lasers. Laser systems and applications.
Safety problems.
EE 615 Optoelectronics (3-0)3
Review of electromagnetic theory relevant
to optoelectronics. Propagation of rays, spherical waves and Gaussian beams.
Optical resonators. Modulation and detection of optical radiation. Noise in
optical detection and generation. Interaction of light and sound. Lasers and
laser applications. Fiber optics and applications.
EE 616 Nuclear Electronics and Instrumentation (3-0)3
An introduction to nuclear physics.
Particle accelerators. Review of radiation and detection. Principles of system
architecture. Pulse amplifiers and single channel analyzers. Multichannel pulse
height analyzers. Typical nuclear and electronic instruments. Selected topics
in experimental nucleonics.
EE 617 Principles of Analog VLSI Design (3-0)3
NMOS and CMOS processes. Transistor circuit
modeling. Current Mirror. Operational Amplifiers Pseudo analog techniques.
Continuous time and switched capacitor filters. A/D and D/A conversion.
Oscillator and phase locked loop design.
EE 618 Principles of Digital CMOS VLSI Design (3-0)3
Introduction to CMOS circuits. MOS
transistor theory. CMOS processing technology. Circuit characterization and performance
estimation. CMOS circuit and logic design. Structured design and testing.
Symbolic layout systems. CMOS subsystem design. System case studies.
EE 619 High Speed Semiconductor Devices and Circuits (3-0)3
Band structure and transport properties of
III-V compound semiconductors. III-V semiconductor technology, crsystal growth,
material characterization and device fabrication techniques, physics, modeling
and integrated circuit applications of III-V metal semiconductor field-effect
transistors (MESFETs), modulation doped field-effect transistors (MODFETs),
and heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs).
EE 621 Theory of Acoustic Wave (3-0)3
Wave propagation and interaction in media;
acoustic waves in isotropic and unisotropic solids. Acoustics and
electromagnetism. Reflection and refraction of acoustic waves. Acoustic
transducers. Surface acoustic waves. Applications of acoustic waves.
EE 624 High Frequency Methods in Electromagnetics (3-0)3
Asymptotic series, asymptotic evaluation of
integrals, Kirchoff and Physical Optics approximations, Luneberg-Kleine
expansion, the eikonal and transport equations, Geometrical optics, WKBJ
approximation, Geometrical Theory of Diffraction and uniform versions (UTD,
UAT) for edge and convex surface diffraction. Physical Theory of Diffraction,
GTD and PTD equivalent edge currents, applications: open ended waveguides,
horn antennas, reflector antennas.
EE 625 Fundamentals of Radar Systems I (3-0)3
General design principles and performance
evaluation of pulsed radars. Statistical detection theory and radar
cross-section of targets. CW, FM and Doppler radars. Target tracking radars.
EE 626 Fundamentals of Radar Systems II (3-0)3
Radar receiver design. High power microwave
generation and amplification; Radar antennas. Detection of radar signals in
noise and waveform design. Propagation of radar wave and radar clutter.
Electronic counter measure systems in radar.
Prerequisite: EE 625
EE 627 Principles of Modern Optical System (3-0)3
A general review of ray optics, wave
optics, beam optics, fourier optics and photon optics. Electromagnetic theory
of optics and polarization; optical waveguides; fiber optics; optical
resonators optical fiber sensors; theory, applications and system considerations.
An overview of the other principal application of optics.
EE 633 Digital Speech Processing (3-0)3
Digital models for the speech signal. Time
domain models for speech processing. Digital representations of the speech
waveform. Short time Fourier analysis of speech. Sub-Band coding. Transform
coding. Linear Predictive coding of speech. Homomorphic speech processing.
Delayed decision coding. Performance measurement in digital speech processing
systems. Introduction to speech recognition. Digital signal processors.
EE 634 Digital Image Processing (3-0)3
Two-dimensional signals and systems. Image
sampling and quantization. Image Transforms: 2-D Discrete Fourier Transform,
2-D Discrete Cosine Transform. 2-D filter design. Image perception. Image
enhancement. Image restoration. Image coding.
EE 635 Fourier Optics (3-0)3
Application of Fourier theory to the
analysis and synthesis of optical imaging and optical data processing systems.
Propagation and diffraction of light. Fresnel and Fraunhofer approximations.
Fourier transforming properties of lenses. Image formation with coherent and
incoherent light. Transfer function of imaging systems. Optical data processing
and holography.
EE 636 Digital Video Processing (3-0)3
Fundamentals of digital video processing.
Digital video representation.
Video enhancement and filtering. 2-D motion estimation/ tracking.
Standards conversion. De-interlacing. Video coding basics. Emerging
international standards for image and video compression. Digital TV.
Video communication.
EE 637 Digital Radio Communications (3-0)3
Characterization of fading multipath
channels. Digital signalling over frequency selective and nonselective fading
channels. Diversity techniques. Coded waveforms for fading channels. Direct
sequence spread spectrum signals. Frequency hopping spread spectrum signals.
Synchronization of spread spectrum signals. Some applications.
Prerequisite: Consent of department.
EE 642 Introduction to Mathematical Bases of Computer Graphics (3-0)3
Transformations of points and lines. Two
and three dimensional transformations; translation, rotation, scaling and
sheving. Projections and perspective transformations., Plane curves;
Nonparametric and parametric curves and representations. Space curves;
representation, splines and B-splines. Surface description and generation;
bilinear, bicubic, coons, Bezier and B-spline surfaces.
EE 647 Microprocessor Systems Engineering (3-0)3
Microprocessor-based hardware and software
systems. Software engineering methods. Software quality. Cohesion, coupling,
span of control. Recent approaches to software design. Software testing and
implementation. Software maintainability. Hardware-software integration.
Software project management. Recent topics in software engineering.
EE 655 Chaotic Dynamics (3-0)3
Nonlinear dynamics: Review of linear and
nonlinear vibration theory. Maps, flow and the local geometric theory of
dynamics. Point attractors; multiple and nested cyclic attractors; strange
attractors. Identification of chaotic oscillations : Poincare maps. Nonlinear
resonance. Competing attractors. Basins of attractions. Julia Sets, Fourier
Spectrum. Stability and bifurcation of attractors. Horseshoe maps. Measuring
chaos (Lyapunov exponents). Fractal set theory. Information loss and entropy.
Fractal dimensions and entropies of strange attractors.
EE 671 Modern Power Systems Operation and Control Techniques (3-0)3
Modern control center application software
system, Dynamic modeling of power system; speed gowerners, turbines, generator
and load. The generation control problem (AGC), System governing, Supplementary
regulation (LFC), Area regulation, Regulation as a function of bias setting,
Economic dispatch, Control execution, Automatic voltage control loop (AVR).
Prerequisite: EE 472.
EE 674 Computational Techniques in Power System Analysis II (3-0)3
Power system modeling; sparse data
structures; computational issues for various power system problems; solution of
large sparse linear systems: factorization, ordering, inverse factors, sparse
vector methods, compensation, partial matrix refactorization, applications;
vector processing and parallel processing: implementation issues and
applications in power.
EE 7XX Special Topics in Electrical and Electronics Engineering (3-0)3
Courses not listed in catalogue. Contents
vary from year to year according to interest of students and instructor in
charge.
EE 8XX Special Studies (4-2)NC
M.S. students choose and study a topic
under the guidance of a faculty member, normally his/her advisor.
EE 9XX Advanced Studies (4-0)NC
Graduate students as a group or a Ph.
D.student choose and study advanced topics under the guidance of a faculty
member, normally his/her supervisor.
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