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David Miller
received a B. Sc. in Physics from St. Andrews University, and
performed his graduate studies at Heriot-Watt University where he was
a Carnegie Research Scholar. After receiving the Ph. D. degree in
1979, he continued to work at Heriot-Watt University, latterly as a
Lecturer in the Department of Physics. He moved to AT&T Bell
Laboratories in 1981 as a Member of Technical Staff, and from 1987 to
1996 was a Department Head, latterly of the Advanced Photonics
Research Department. He is currently the W. M. Keck Foundation
Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, and is
Director of the the Solid State and
Photonics Laboratory at Stanford, and a Co-Director of the Stanford
Photonics Research Center. He also served as the
Director of the E. L. Ginzton Laboratory at
Stanford University from 1997-2006.
His research
interests include the use of optics in switching, interconnection,
communications, computing, and sensing systems, physics and
applications of quantum well optics and optoelectronics, and
fundamental features and limits for optics and nanophotonics in
communications and information processing. He has published over 200
technical papers including
13 book chapters, a text
book Quantum Mechanics for Scientists and Engineers, delivered over
120 conference invited talks and
over 40 short
courses, and holds 62 patents.
He has been a
member or chair of over 40 technical conference committees, and was
General Co-Chair for the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics in
1996. He has been elected to the Boards of both the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Lasers and Electro-Optics
Society (LEOS) and the Optical Society of America (OSA),
was a member of the Defense Sciences Research Council for the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency from 1991-2005, and
also served on several scientific journal
editorial boards. He was President of the IEEE Lasers and
Electro-Optics Society in 1995. He also has served on boards for
several photonics companies.
He is a Member of
the National Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the Royal Society of
London, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the IEEE, the Optical Society
of America and the American Physical Society, and was awarded the
Doctor Honoris Causa by the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and an honorary
Doctor of Engineering from Heriot-Watt University. For his work on
semiconductor nonlinear optics, quantum well optical properties, and
novel devices, he was awarded the 1986 Adolph Lomb Medal of the OSA,
was co-recipient of the 1988 R. W. Wood Medal, and received the 1991
Prize of the International Commission for Optics. He was also an IEEE
Lasers and Electro-Optics Society Traveling Lecturer in 1986-87. He
was awarded an IEEE Third Millennium Medal in 2000.
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