Ananda Sanagavarapu Mohan

Also published under:Ananda S. Mohan

Affiliation

Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology, University of Technology Sydney, NSW, Australia

Topic

Breast Tissue,Antenna Array,Breast Cancer,Breast Cancer Screening,Early Breast Cancer,Magnetic Field,Microwave Imaging,Noise Subspace,Signal Subspace,Time-reversal,Amount Of Tissue,Array Elements,Arrival Time,Backpropagation,Benign Ones,Benign Tissue,Benign Tumors,Biological Media,Breast Density,Breast Tumors,Channel Model,Chest Wall,Classification Of Tumors,Complicated Geometries,Conductive,Continuous Wavelet Transform,Damping Factor,Debye Temperature,Detection Results,Dielectric Constant,Dielectric Medium,Dielectric Properties,Dipole Antenna,Early Cancer,Early Detection Of Breast Cancer,Early Detection Of Cancer,Eigenvectors,Electric Vector,Fine Grid,Finite-difference Time-domain,Free Space,Frequency Bins,Gastrointestinal Tract,Ground Penetrating Radar,Healthy Ones,Homogeneous Medium,Human Tissue,Incident Field,Inhomogeneous Medium,Internal Modes,

Biography

Ananda Sanagavarapu Mohan (M'92–SM'05) received the Ph.D. degree in electrical communication engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, in 1986.
He was a Scientist and Senior Scientist with the Research and Training Unit for Navigational Electronics, Hyderabad, India, from 1985 to 1991. During 1986–1987, he was a Postdoctoral Fellow with the Air Navigation Research Group, School of Electrical Engineering, University of Sydney, Australia. He joined the Faculty of Engineering, University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), in 1992, and is currently an Associate Professor with the I&C Group, where he leads research on microwave and wireless technology and their applications in communication and biomedical engineering. He was formerly the Director of the Sydney Microwave Design Resource Center and Associate Director of the Cooperative Research Center on Satellite Systems at UTS. He is currently a core member of the Key University Research Center on Health Technologies, and is the Chief Investigator of a number of Australian Research Council, National Health and Medical Research Council, and university and industry-funded research projects on antennas for cardiac ablation, broadband and UWB antennas, smart antennas and channel modeling for indoor wireless communications, microwave imaging for biomedical applications, and high-performance microwave filters. His current teaching and research interests include channel modeling and smart antennas for wireless mobile communications, UWB techniques in imaging, novel optimization algorithms, small antennas, and applications of microwave technology in medicine.
Professor Mohan was a corecipient of the Priestly Memorial Award from the Institute of Radio and Electronic Engineers (IREE), Australia, in 1997. He is the member of the IEEE in New South Wales (NSW) section committee and the current chair of the IEEE NSW AP/MTT joint chapter. He was a member of the organizing and technical program committees of the IEEE Globecom'98, APMC 2000 and the International Symposium on Wireless Systems and Networks (2003).