Bixio RimoldiBixio Rimoldi received the Dipl. El.-Ing degree as well as the Dr. ès Sciences degree from the ETHZ, Switzerland. Since 1997, he holds a full professor position at the School of Computer and Communication Sciences at EPFL and he is the director of EPFL's Mobile Communications Laboratory (LCM). Prior to joining EPFL, he was in the faculty of the Electrical Engineering department of Washington University.
In 1993, he received a US National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award. In 2000, he was elected to the grade of Fellow of the IEEE. During the period 2002-2009 he has been on the Board of Governors of the IEEE Information Theory Society, where he served in several offices including President. He was co-chairman with Bruce Hajek of the 1995 IEEE Information Theory Workshop on Information Theory, Multiple Access, and Queueing (St Louis, MO), and co-chairman with Jim Massey of the 2002 IEEE International Symposium in Information Theory (Lausanne, Switzerland). He has been a member of the editorial board of "Foundations and Trends on Communications and Information Theory," and was an editor of the European Transactions on Telecommunications. During 2005 and 2006 he was the Director of EPFL's Bachelor program in Communication Systems.
His interests are in various aspects of digital communications, information theory, and software-defined radio.
Ileana-Cristina Benea-ChelmusIleana-Cristina Benea-Chelmus is an Assistant Professor of Microengineering at the Institute of Electro and Microengineering at EPFL since January 2022. She is also a Research Associate affiliated with the group of Prof. Federico Capasso at Harvard University.
Prior to her appointment, she was a Postdoctoral scientist and SNF fellow in the group of Prof. Federico Capasso at Harvard University, USA in the John A. Harvard school of engineering and applied sciences since March 2019 to December 2021. She lead efforts on tunable metasurfaces enabled by nonlinear optics, supported through a personal grant from the Hans-Eggenberger Foundation. Apart from science, she was actively driving advocacy work within the postdoctoral association at Harvard.
She holds a Bachelor Degree in Electrical Engineering and Information Technology (2010) and a Master Degree with distinction in Optics and Photonics (2013) – both from KIT, Germany. During her master, she spent one year at EPFL (2011) as an ERASMUS Exchange student in Physics, where she acquired in-depth knowledge of solid-state physics, quantum mechanics and biotechnology. During her Bachelor, she received a stipend from the Anna-Ruths Foundation. In the summer of 2009, she was awarded a research stipend from DAAD “Rise in North America” to perform a summer internship at Vanderbilt University, TN, and became a scholar of SyBBURE. For her Master studies, Ileana-Cristina was awarded an excellence stipend from the Karlsruhe School of Optics and Photonics which she absolved with merits. She was selected to participate in extended carrier building programs such as "Female talents at IBM and KIT" as well as "Femtec". She did a summer internship at IMEC in Belgium and IBM Research in Zurich under the supervision of Dr. Armin Knoll. For her Master thesis she decided to join the group of Prof. Jérôme Faist and work on terahertz quantum cascade lasers and their applications in spectroscopy. She continued with her Ph.D. thesis in the same lab on quantum science. She started very early to drive a substantial proportion of the research work done in the framework of an ERC Advanced grant. She developed, as the first one in this field, the research branch of time-domain quantum optics at terahertz frequencies. She developed ultrasensitive time-domain detectors.
She received several awards so far
2021
PRIMA independent research grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation,
2019
Hans Eggenberger Prize and Independent Project Grant (Junior Principal Investigator),
2019
SNSF Early Mobility Fellowship Grant,
2019
Ph.D. thesis prize of the European Physical Society – QEOD (awarded every two years),
2019
Ph.D. thesis prize from the Swiss Physical Society in the area of Metrology (awarded every year),
2017
1st place best student presentation award at IRMMW, Cancun, Mexico,
2017
best student paper award at SPIE Photonics West, San Francisco, USA,
2016
best student paper award at SPIE Photonics West, San Francisco, USA,
2012
KSOP master scholarship,
2011
FEMTEC career building program for female students in STEM fields,
2010
IBM and KIT female talents,
2009
DAAD Rise in North America
2009
SyBBURE for summer internship at Vanderbilt, TN, USA,
2008
Anna-Ruths undergraduate scholarship.
She engages with various communities, centers and associations at EPFL and Harvard.
Pierre JacquotDe nationalité suisse et française, Pierre Jacquot est né en 1947 à Besançon, où il obtient de luniversité de Franche-Comté la maîtrise de physique (1970) et le doctorat en physique (1973). Il est engagé en 1974 au département de génie civil de lEPFL pour développer un laboratoire dédié à l'analyse de déformation de corps solide, fondé sur loptique cohérente, et en particulier l'interférométrie holographique et la métrologie speckle.
La recherche et les mandats le confrontent à des problèmes de détermination du comportement mécanique, de contrôle non destructif, de vérification expérimentale de modèles numériques, de mesure de forme, de caractérisation de propriétés de matériaux, où ces nouvelles techniques optiques prouvent leur efficacité.
En 1978 il est nommé chargé de cours aux départements de génie civil et de physique. Pendant 3 ans, il sera aussi chargé de cours au département de microtechnique. Coordinateur du programme Erasmus Applied optics, il dispense un enseignement de spécialisation à l'Ecole supérieure d'optique, Orsay, à la Scuola di tecnologie ottiche, Nuoro, dans les formations CMOI-SFO et ateliers CNRS Photomécanique, à linstitut CREST de luniversité de Franche-Comté, Belfort. Il est nommé professeur titulaire EPFL en 1996. Il organise à Lausanne la conférence internationale Interferometry in speckle light en 2000. Son groupe et ses activités sont transférés la même année au Laboratoire de métrologie du département délectricité, qui devient en 2003 le Laboratoire de nanophotonique et métrologie.
Ses thèmes de recherche sont les éléments optiques diffractifs, l'analyse numérique d'interférogrammes, l'interférométrie speckle digitale, les méthodes de projection de franges, qui constituent le cadre des sujets de thèse proposés dans son groupe. Les besoins de la pratique orientent ses recherches vers des systèmes capables d'opérer hors du laboratoire, dans les halles d'essais, voire in situ. Dans ce but, il a co-initié le projet Eureka VISILAS d'analyse de déformation de grandes structures dans leur environnement. En collaboration avec lIOA-EPFL, et sous limpulsion de ce dernier, le piégeage et lagrégation optiques à léchelle mésoscopique ont été récemment adjoints aux activités du groupe.
Pierre Jacquot est membre de plusieurs comités scientifiques de conférences et dassociations.