The ECE professor received the international recognition in his field, the Lord Rayleigh Award from the IEEE UFFC, recognizing his outstanding achievements, innovation, and leadership in advancing the field of ultrasonics.
With bylines on numerous papers, along with faculty on panels and technical committees, ECE will have a large presence at the premier semiconductor and electronic device technology conference.
Mehrotra, along with a team from Micron, engaged with faculty and students in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering on research, academic collaborations, and the future of memory technology.
Researchers at Georgia Tech, funded by a $4 million DARPA grant, are developing METALLIC, a framework to analyze and mitigate exploit chains—complex, multi-step cyberattacks.
The philanthropic program, co-founded by ECE graduate Mel Coker, gives underrepresented student groups soft skills training and valuable networking opportunities, helping them to land jobs and become leaders in the workforce.
The ECE Ph.D. student was recognized during the Student Paper Competition, and research from three other ECE-affiliated groups were presented at the conference.