Showing posts with label Millimeter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Millimeter. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

El-Shenawee Speaks at Symposium on Biomedical Applications of Terahertz Radiation



Magda El-Shenawee speaks at the Biomedical Applications of Terahertz Applications Symposium at the International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves.

http://news.uark.edu/articles/39699/el-shenawee-speaks-at-symposium-on-biomedical-applications-of-terahertz-radiation


Madga El-Shenawee, a professor of electrical engineering, was invited to speak as one of the four featured experts at this year's International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves.
The conference, hosted by Massachusetts Institute of Technology Initiativesand the Centro de Investigaciones en Optica A.C., featured a new symposium on the biomedical applications of terahertz (THz) technology. El-Shenawee was featured alongside researchers from the California Institute of Technology, the University of California at Los Angeles, Concordia University and Harvard Medical School.
"When I saw the list of speakers, I felt good because it means that we're putting the University of Arkansas on the map at the same level as all those other universities," said El-Shenawee. "We are among universities that are on the top of the list for biomedical terahertz research."
El-Shenawee presented on her ongoing research, which utilizes terahertz imaging technology to detect positive cancer margins to effectively remove all breast tumor tissue. Her research has significant potential to improve current lumpectomy practices, specifically by decreasing the rate of second surgeries, cancer reoccurrence, and metastasis.
El-Shenawee has been interested in terahertz imaging technology as a tool, and breast cancer as a subject, for years. She put the two together seven years ago after hosting the 2010 Advances in Breast Cancer Research Workshop at UA campus funded by the National Science Foundation. During the workshop, Susan Klimberg, a breast cancer surgeon at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, expressed difficulty seeing cancer on excised breast tissue after a lumpectomy, and in that instance, "I connected the dots," El-Shenawee remembers. "It was at that moment when I said I would use terahertz technology to look at tumor margins."
In 2012, El-Shenawee's lab acquired a state-of-the-art terahertz imaging system funded by NSF/MRI grant, furthering her ability to research an alternative method of detecting and treating breast cancer. Today, her research has garnered attention worldwide and brought in nearly $1.6 million in research funds from the Army Research Laboratory, the University of Arkansas for Medical Science, the National Science Foundation's Major Research Instrumentation Program, and most recently, the National Institutes of Health.
The symposium on the biomedical applications of terahertz was widely successful and drew in over 400 attendees. "Everyone understands that there is a future in terahertz," said El-Shenawee. "This technology has applications in health care and it can impact humanity."

Monday, September 12, 2016

i2S to present at 41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2016)




41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2016)

http://www.i2s-corp.com/events/irmmw-thz-terahertz-conference/

i2S terahertz imaging solutions

During this conference i2S will presents its latest offering in terahertz imaging, including a brand new high sensitivity and high resolution Terahertz camera built around the most advanced microbolometer sensor.

About the conference

The 41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2016)will be held in Copenhagen, Denmark on September 25-30, 2016.
The 41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2016) is dedicated to communications, imaging, materials, energy, basic physics and chemistry.
The 41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2016) covers topics such as:
  • Applications in Biology and Medicine
  • Astronomy and Environmental Science
  • Applications in Industry
  • Applications in Security and Defense
  • Protein Dynamics and Molecular Spectroscopy
  • Spectroscopy and Material Properties
  • Sources, Detectors, and Receivers
  • Spectroscopy of Gases, Liquids, and Solids
  • Modeling and Analysis Techniques
  • Imaging and Remote Sensing
  • Devices, Components, and Systems
  • Metamaterial Structures and Applications
  • High-Field THz Wave Generation and Nonlinear THz Physics
  • R&D, Future Applications, and Market Directions
  • MMW systems, Transmission Lines and Antennas
  • Frequency and Time Domain Instruments
  • Ultra High Speed MMW Digital Devices
  • MMW and Sub-millimeter Wave Radar and Communications
  • Quantum Cascade Lasers
  • Laser Driven THz Sources
  • Free Electron Lasers and Synchrotron Radiation
  • Gyro-Oscillators and Amplifiers
  • Applications in Art Conservation studies
  • Planetary and Earth Science Applications
  • Plasma Diagnostics
  • Ultrafast Measurements
  • Metrology

Friday, January 31, 2014

International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz), September 14-19th


http://www.irmmw-thz.org
*IRMMW-THz 2014 (#39) is now open for Registration and Abstract Submission*Dates are: September 14-19th. Chris Walker and Peter H. Siegel are local co-Chairs. You can register for the conference, upload your abstract or start making travel plans at: www.irmmw-thz2014.org

The International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz), begun in 1974, is the oldest and largest continuous forum specifically devoted to the field of ultra high frequency electronics and applications. In 2004 the original conference series - International Conference on Infrared and Millimeter Waves (IRMMW) joined up with the International Conference on THz Electronics to form the Joint 29th International Conference on Infrared and Millimeter Waves and the 12th International Conference on Terahertz Electronics (IRMMW-THz 2004). In 2008 the conference name was shortened to the 33rd International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves, keeping the same general acronym: IRMMW-THz 20XX. In 2009 the conference series was formally incorporated into a permanent non-profit international society registered in the state of California, USA. The International Society of Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz) has the mission statement: "Promoting the worldwide collection, dissemination and exchange of scientific and technical knowledge in the areas and disciplines involving infrared, millimeter, and terahertz waves." The IRMMW-THz Society has a permanent Board of Directors, official By-Laws, and independent financial resources, and will assure the continuation of the conference series for the foreseeable future.
The IRMMW conference and its long standing accompanying monthly publication, The Journal of Infrared, Millimeter and Terahertz Waves, were among the very first scientific outlets for the burgeoning field of far infrared components and instruments that arose in the mid 1970s. The scope of the conference extends from millimeter wave devices, components and systems to far-infrared detectors and instruments, and encompasses micro- and nano-scale structures to large-scale accelerators and Tokamaks and their applications. In 2011 a new focused THz journal, IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology was added to the list of linked technical outlets for members of the IRMMW-THz Society.
The international organizing committee is composed of world-recognized experts from eleven countries. The conference typically alternates between the USA, Asia and Europe on a three year cycle. Past conferences have been supported by US agencies such as IEEE, APS, DOE and DoD and dozens of local societies within the hosting countries. In 2003 both the IRMMW and THz Electronics conferences were held sequentially in Japan. Total attendees for both events was 520 registrants from 18 countries with 340 submitted papers. After 2003 the two conferences joined and attendance in 2004 (Karlsruhe, Germany) exceeded 450 scientists from 28 countries with over 400 contributed papers. The 2005 conference in Williamsburg, Virginia, hosted 300 scientists from 23 countries with more than 375 contributed papers. In Shanghai, China in 2006 more than 550 papers were submitted representing 28 countries and regions, the largest venue in recent memory. The 2007 conference in Cardiff, Wales, UK ended with more than 430 participants from 18 countries and 550 submitted papers. The 2008 conference in Pasadena had over 460 papers from 32 countries. The 2009 venue in Busan, Korea had over 535 attendees from 43 countries. In 2010 the conference in Rome hosted the largest crowd to date, with 640 participants from around the world.
Sandwiched between the optical on the short wavelength side and radio on the long wavelength extreme, the Terahertz or Far-Infrared has long been considered the last remaining scientific gap in the electromagnetic spectrum. Due to the historic role the IRMMW conference has played in bridging this gap by bringing together international researchers in many diverse fields - from space science to nuclear fusion - and recently chemistry and biology, the organizing committees would again like to reach out to scientists in adjacent fields who can benefit from recent developments in the far-IR.
In the last few years interest in terahertz imaging and spectroscopy from the biology, security, ultra-fast chemistry and health science communities has grown exponentially as new instrumentation and techniques have begun to make their way into many laboratories world-wide. This is especially the case in Europe and Japan, both of which have thriving cross-disciplinary programs supporting new applications in this frequency domain.
As a consequence the conference organizing committees have significantly expanded the scope and the participating research communities. They have now included a special focus on terahertz techniques and applications, including both the traditional radio frequency domain, and the new fast pulse time domain approaches to generating, detecting and using high frequency energy. The conference offers the attendee a chance to hear and participate in a wide range of topic areas that span all aspects of Infrared, Terahertz and Millimeter-Wave (IR, THz, and MMW) technology and applications from quantum physics, chemistry, and biology to radio astronomy, plasma physics and security.
Over the coming years we are looking forward to very well attended and internationally supported cross-disciplinary conference venues that will set IRMMW-THz up as the pre-eminent conference for information exchange in the "Terahertz Gap."
Major Topic Areas
The following is a representative list of topics typically covered at the conference:
  1. New IR, THz and MMW applications in Biology and Medicine
  2. IR, THz and MMW Imaging, especially biomedical applications
  3. Ultra-fast Components and Measurements in Chemistry and Physics
  4. IR, THz and MMW Astronomy, Atmospheric and Environmental Science Applications
  5. IR, THz and MMW Spectroscopy, Instrumentation and Material Properties
  6. IR, THz and MMW Applications in Security and Defense
  7. MMW Telecommunication and Industrial Applications
  8. Ultra High Speed MMW Digital Devices
  9. MMW and Submillimeter-Wave Radar and Communications
  10. MMW systems, Transmission Lines and Antennas
  11. Gyro-Oscillators and Amplifiers
  12. Free Electron Lasers and Synchrotron Radiation
  13. Plasma Diagnostics
  14. Novel devices and Instruments for IR, THz and MMW applications
  15. THz Devices, Components and Instruments; Frequency and Time Domain.
  16. IR, THz, and MMW Sources, Detectors and Receivers
  17. IR, THZ and MMW Future Applications, Markets and Directions