The School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Electrical Engineering Courses

  • Dynamic systems from the state variable approach; observability, controllability, stability, and sensitivity of differential and non differential systems. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 572).

  • Optimal linear feedback control, optimal stochastic observers, LQG/LTR design methodology, modern Wiener-Hopf design, robust controllers. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 574).

  • Introduction and development of computational and analytical methods required to characterize large-scale networks.

  • Diffraction theory, Fourier transforming and imaging properties of lenses, spatial filtering, holography, temporal and spatial coherence, imaging through random media.

  • Overview of nonlinear phenomena, Lyapunov stability, input-output stability, periodic orbits, singular perturbation, differential perturbation, differential geometric methods, bifurcations and complex behaviors.

  • Functions of random variables; random sequences; stochastic processes; mean-square stochastic calculus; ergodicity; spectral density; linear transformations, filtering, dynamic systems. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 570).

  • Principles of statistical estimates; LLSE; Kalman filtering; smoothing; predictions; maximum-likelihood and Beyesian estimation.

  • Model reference adaptive systems (MRAS), adaptive observers, adaptive control, on-line identification, robustness issues, self-tuning regulators.

  • Analysis of homo-junction and hetero-junction solar cells.

  • Protection of electrical equipment as related to electric power systems with emphasis on digital algorithms. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 526).

  • Devices and classical network synthesis, two-port network theory, filters, active filters.

  • Experiments with optical systems; imaging interference coherence, information storage/processing, gas and solid state lasers, optical fibers, and communication systems. Same as Physics 514.

  • Experiments in optical physics, physical properties of light, laser physics, waveguides, quantum confined semiconductor structures and ultrafast dynamics and nonlinear optics. Same as Physics 515.

  • Radiative transfer theory; rough surface scattering; scattering in random media; scattering by random discrete scatterers; the T-matrix method; inverse scattering.

  • Graduate-level counterpart of EE 417. Credit not granted for both.

  • Electromagnetic waves, electromagnetic theorems and concepts, solutions to the wave equation in rectangular, cylindrical and spherical coordinates. Cooperative course taught by WSU, open to UI students (EE 530).

  • Exact solutions to canonical electromagnetic diffraction problems, high and low frequency limits, foundations of numerical solutions to electromagnetic scattering problems.

  • Electro magnetics, kinetic theory, and fluid mechanics of plasmas in space, arcs, plasma processing, coronas, and fusion reactors.

  • Concepts and practices of modern power engineering, including faults, stability, cables, dc transmission and overvoltage phenomena.

  • High voltage-high power phenomena; design and measurements associated with electrical transmission, current interruption, insulation, transformation, lightning, and corona.

  • Instruction set architectures, pipelining and super pipelining, instruction level parallelism, superscalar and VLIW processors, cache memory, thread-level parallelism and VLSI.

  • Graduate-Level counterpart of EE 426. Credit not granted for both.

  • Antenna fundamentals, analytical techniques, characteristics and design procedures for selected types of wire, broadband, and aperture antennas. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 533).

  • May be repeated for credit; cumulative maximum 6 hours. Advanced topics of current interest in wave propagation (electro magnetics, acoustics, or optics).

  • Frequency selective digital filtering, least squares filtering, adaptive filtering, multirate signal processing.

  • Available energy resources; energy issues; economic analysis of energy alternatives; energy future.

  • Development, current state and future of high speed computing application of existing commercial supercomputers to engineering problems. Cooperative course taught by UI (EE 504)

  • Computer simulation of electromagnetics using the finite-difference, time-domain (FDTD) method; theory of finite-difference simulation, techniques for modeling EM propagation in lossy and dispersive media, boundary conditions for time-domain simulation. Cooperative course taught by UI (EE 538).

  • State space approach, SISO, optimal control, state estimators, stochastic systems, state estimation in the presence of noise.

  • Theory of signals; signal spaces; basis sets; signal representations; projections theorem; Fourier transform; optimum signal design.

  • Parallel processing inspired by natural neural systems; neural computer architecture, supervised and unsupervised learning, generalization, implementation, and application; neurophysiology basis.

  • Source coding with a fidelity criterion; quantization theory; predictive, transform and subband coding; noiseless source codes.

  • Information theory; entropy, mutual information, source and channel coding theorems, channel capacity, Gaussian channels; channel coding; block and convolutional codes.

  • Digital communications; multi-amplitude/phase signal constellations; probability of error performance; cutoff rate; Viterbi algorithm; trellis coded modulation.

  • Analysis and design of high speed asynchronous state machines, timing defect analysis, modular elements, arbiters, programmable sequencers, system level design. Cooperative course taught jointly by WSU and UI (EE 540).

  • Packet switching networks; multi-access and local-area networks; delay models in data networks; routing and flow control.

  • Fault tolerance aspects involved in design and evaluation of systems; methods of detection and recovery; modeling, correcting codes and reconfiguration. Same as Cpt S 562.

  • Signal processing and communication theory aspects of frequency domain analysis of continuous and discrete random signals.

  • Methods of modulating, generating, and detecting light; display techniques; display devices; fiber optics.

  • Credit 3. Prerequisites: EE 521 or equivalent.

 

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