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Biography
Christos CHRISTOPOULOS was born in Patras, Greece in 1946. He received the Diploma in Electrical and Mechanical Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens in 1969 and the MSc and DPhil from the University of Sussex in 1979 and 1974 respectively.
In 1974 he joined the Arc Research Project of the University of Liverpool and spent two years working on vacuum arcs and breakdown while on attachments at the UKAEA Culham Laboratory. In 1976 he joined the University of Durham as a Senior Demonstrator in Electrical Engineering Science. In October 1978 he joined the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, University of Nottingham, was promoted to Professor of Electrical Engineering in 1990 and became the Director of the George Green Institute for Electromagnetics Research (GGIEMR) in 2001. He is now Emeritus Professor.
His research interests are in Computational Electromagnetics, Electromagnetic Compatibility, Signal Integrity, Protection and Simulation of Power Networks, and Electrical Discharges and Plasmas. He is the author of over 400 research publications, five books and several book chapters. He has received the Electronics Letters and the Snell Premiums from the IEE and several conference best paper awards. He is a member of the IET, and an IEEE Fellow. He is past Executive Team Chairman of the IEE Professional Network in EMC, member of the CIGRE Working Group 36.04 on EMC and Associate Editor of the IEEE EMC Transactions. He served as Vice-Chairman of URSI Commission E "Noise and Interference" in the period 2008-2011. In 2011 he received the IET Ambrose Fleming Medal for Achievement in Information and Communications. He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (FREng).
Expertise Summary
Computational Electromagnetics (CEM), Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC), Signal Integrity (SI), Electromagnetic Design, Electromagnetic Characterization of Materials, EMC in Aerospace Applications, Fast Transients and Travelling Wave Protection of Large Networks, Lightning Effects on Large Systems, Waves in Plasmas |