
Carl Pfeiffer, an
undergraduate student of electrical engineering, received an
IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques
Society Undergradute/Pre-Graduate Scholarship. He is one of only seven
recipients of this award, which is designed to encourage future leaders and
key technical contributors. Carl has been working in
Prof. Tony Grbic's lab
for the past two years and has been very active in research during this
time. He co-presented a conference poster at this past summer's
General Assembly of the
International Union of Radio Science (URSI) in Chicago, entitled,
"Broadband Negative-Refractive-Index Media: Analytical Modeling and
Free-Space Measurements," co-authored by graduate student Scott Rudolph and
Prof. Grbic. In this paper, Carl reported on the free-space material
characterization system he developed at X-band frequencies (8-12 GHz). He
has also submitted a conference paper on the antenna he developed during his
2008 Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) summer internship to the
2009 IEEE International Symposium on
Antennas and Propagation. Prof. Grbic says he has been extremely
impressed with Carl's research ability, as well as his initiative in
learning the background material needed to accomplish the research, which
included reading Prof. Fawwaz Ulaby's book, Electromagnetics for
Engineers, and other background material. "Carl is quite creative when
it comes to overcoming hurdles that lay in the path of achieving his
research goals," stated Prof. Grbic.
|