Introduction

Lucas develops electronics instrumentation for novel detection applications. At Cornell, he designed CMOS readout circuits for new x-ray detectors that opened windows to single particle x-ray diffraction measurements and time-resolved measurements of combusting metallic foils. During his time at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab he created radiation-hardened CMOS electronics for a time-of-flight based charged particle spectroscope destined for civilian space missions. Most recently, he led an electrical test team for cameras in mobile devices at a Fortune 500 company in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Courses

  • ENGR350 Introduction to Electronics
  • PHYS341 Electricity & Magnetism
  • ENGR342 Electromagnetic Fields and Waves
  • ENG230 Digital Design
  • ETLS630 Sensors for IoT and Autonomy
  • ENGR480/481 Senior Design Clinic

Links

Academic Areas and Departments

Electrical & Computer Engineering

School of Engineering

Education

Physics
2010, PhD, Cornell University
Physics
2006, MS, Cornell University
Integrated Science Program, Physics and Mathematics
2003, BA, Northwestern University