Zhu Han

Zhu Han is a John and Rebecca Moores Professor of electrical engineering at the University of Houston. He was named Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2014[1] for contributions to resource allocation and security in wireless communications.

Education and career

Han obtained his B.S. degree in electronic engineering from Tsinghua University in 1997 and then got his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Maryland, College Park in 1999 and 2003 respectively. From 2000 to 2002, he served as research and development engineer at JDSU in Germantown, Maryland and then served one year as graduate research assistant at the University of Maryland. After serving as research associate at the University of Maryland from 2003 to 2006, Han relocated to Boise State University in Idaho. After two year service there, he moved again, this time to the University of Houston, where he served as assistant, associate, and proifessor, becoming John and Rebecca Moores Professor in 2018.[2]

Awards & Honors

gollark: Calculators are a vaguely weird and annoying product because they're very expensive, worse than equivalent general-purpose computing things like phones, and basically *only* exist for exams.
gollark: It always annoys me that foolish human brains are really bad at running things like high-quality RNGs or cryptography.
gollark: Weird. I would have said it was a marker for the heads of something, but I doubt it would have to be dots for that.
gollark: People sometimes say that they can't learn properly without experiencing the real world or whatever, but text is very information-dense and there is a *lot* of it.
gollark: So far.

References

  1. "IEEE Fellows 2014". IEEE Fellows Directory. Retrieved 2019-12-02.
  2. "Zhu Han". University of Houston. Retrieved 2019-12-02.


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