Synopsis
Microwave Solid State Circuit Design Edited by Inder Bahl and Prakash Bhartia This sound introduction to microwave solid state circuit design emphasizes devices with current and potential future applications. It provides step-by-step design procedures which help the reader to sharpen design skills; covers the complete spectrum of the most widely used microwave solid state circuits; and includes problem sets, list of acronyms and symbols, and extensive references. A team of specialists cover transmission lines, resonators, hybrids and couplers, active and passive devices, microwave control circuits, computer-aided design, microwave optic, acoustic and magnetostatic circuits, and more. 1988 (0 471-83189-1) 914 pp. Numerical Techniques for Microwave and Millimeter Wave Passive Structures Edited by Tatsuo Itoh The most comprehensive work on a number of practical numerical methods for analyzing passive structures in microwave and millimeter-wave integrated circuits. The introduction presents a brief comparison of the various numerical methods and how they may be integrated into computer-aided-design programs so the reader can make an appropriate choice. Chapters following present step-by-step, detailed descriptions of the methods, each chapter being written by the utmost authority on the subject. Chapters provide illustrative examples, and are written so that the reader can write his own computer program based on the method (some chapters include sample computer programs). 1989 (0 471-62563-9) 707 pp.
About the Author
About the editor KAI CHANG is a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Texas A&M University, where he teaches and performs research in microwave devices and circuits. Previously, Dr. Chang was a section head at TRW, Inc., where he was responsible for millimeter-wave integrated circuit and subsystem development. Prior to this, he was a supervisor at Hughes Aircraft Company, where he was involved in the development of microwave and millimeter-wave circuits, oscillators, and power combiners. He has contributed chapters to a number of books and has published over 100 technical papers on microwave circuits, components, and subsystems. Dr. Chang received the Special Achievement Award from TRW, the Halliburton Professor Award and Distinguished Teaching Award from the Texas A&M University. He earned his BS degree from the National Taiwan University, MS degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and PhD degree from the University of Michigan in 1970, 1972, and 1976, respectively.
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