Mariana Dalarsson

Also published under:M. Dalarsson

Affiliation

KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering, Stockholm, Sweden

Topic

Radiation Pattern,Antenna Array,Envelope Correlation Coefficient,Antenna Design,Diversity Gain,Impedance Bandwidth,Resonance Frequency,Frequency Band,Maxwell’s Equations,Operating Band,Reflection Coefficient,Single Element,Channel Capacity,Compact Size,Coplanar Waveguide,Dielectric Constant,Dual-band Antenna,Exact Analytical Solution,Gold Nanoparticles,Metamaterial,Analytical Results,Antenna Performance,Antenna System,Compact Antenna,Current Distribution,Dual Band,Electric Field Strength,Frequency Spectrum,High Frequency Structure Simulator,High Gain,Impedance Matching,Loss Tangent,Multiple-input Multiple-output,Multiple-input Multiple-output Antenna,Mutual Coupling,Negative Refractive Index,Numerical Simulations,Patch Antenna,Return Loss,Wide Bandwidth,Wideband Antenna,Wireless Networks,5G Applications,5G mmWave,Absorption Cross-section,Bidirectional Pattern,Circular Waveguide,Drude Model,Even And Odd,Far-field Radiation Patterns,

Biography

Mariana Dalarsson (Member, IEEE) received the M.Sc. degree (Hons.) in physics and the Ph.D. degree in electromagnetic theory from the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, in 2010 and 2016, respectively, and the Docent degree from Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden, in 2019. From 2016 to 2019, she was a Postdoctoral Researcher with the Group of Waves, Signals and Systems, Linnaeus University. From 2019 to 2020, she was an Assistant Professor with the Department of Electrical and Information Technology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. She is currently an Assistant Professor with the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden. She is the author of more than 60 scientific publications, including 25 journal articles and one book. Her teaching and research interests include electromagnetic scattering and absorption, inverse problems, electromagnetics of stratified media, double-negative metamaterials, and mathematical physics. She received the Honorary Grant given to the best graduate of the year of her M.Sc. programme, in 2011. She is also the second youngest woman ever to be awarded a Ph.D. degree from KTH. She is currently pursuing research as a PI within her own project grant “Waveguide theory for artificial materials and plasmonics” awarded by the Swedish Research Council. She is the winner of multiple teaching and research awards, including the L’Oréal-Unesco For Women in Science Sweden Award, in 2021.