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Following in the footsteps of its popular predecessors, this third edition continues to provide a wide-angle, integrated view of the field of high power microwaves (HPMs). This edition includes significant updates in every chapter as well as a new chapter on beamless systems that covers nonlinear transmission lines. It discusses the key criteria

Produktbeschreibung
Following in the footsteps of its popular predecessors, this third edition continues to provide a wide-angle, integrated view of the field of high power microwaves (HPMs). This edition includes significant updates in every chapter as well as a new chapter on beamless systems that covers nonlinear transmission lines. It discusses the key criteria
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Autorenporträt
James Benford is the president of Microwave Sciences, Inc. He is a fellow of the IEEE and EMP. He has taught 26 courses on high power microwaves in 10 countries. His research interests include high power microwave systems from conceptual designs to hardware, microwave source physics, electromagnetic power beaming for space propulsion, experimental intense particle beams, and plasma physics. He earned a PhD in physics from the University of California, San Diego. Visit jamesbenford.com for more details about his work. John A. Swegle is a senior advisory scientist at the Savannah River National Laboratory. He is also an independent consultant on high power microwaves. He has conducted short courses or extended workshops on high power microwaves in the United States, Europe, and China. He was an associate editor of The Physics of Plasmas and an editor of a special issue of the IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science. He earned a PhD and an MS in plasma physics from Cornell University and a BSEE and an MSEE from the University of Washington. Edl Schamiloglu is a distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of New Mexico. A fellow of the IEEE and EMP, he conducts numerous short courses and lectures worldwide and is a recipient of numerous honors, including the IEEE NPSS Richard F. Shea Award and the IEEE NPSS Pulsed Power Science and Technologies' Peter Haas Award. His research interests include high power microwave source development and their effects on networked infrastructure. He earned a BS and an MS from Columbia University and a PhD from Cornell University.