Related News for Aravind Nagulu

New Analog Chip Design Improves Performance for Modern Radar Systems

Electrical engineering graduate student Aswin Undavalli, PhD’29, and ECE Assistant Professor Aravind Nagulu published their research on “Fully Analog, Multi-Lag, RF Correlators for Code-Domain Radars Using Margin Propagation” in the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits.

Aravind Nagulu

New Analog Chip Powers Next-Gen Radar

ECE Assistant Professor Aravind Nagulu’s lab published their work on “Fully Analog, Multi-Lag, RF Correlators for Code-Domain Radars Using Margin Propagation” in the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits.

Aravind Nagulu, a professor of electrical and computer science, smiling for a headshot. wearing a white blazer and pink button up shirt

Nagulu Is New ECE Faculty at Oakland Campus and Part of Institute for NanoSI

Assistant Professor Aravind Nagulu joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in January 2025. He is based at the Oakland, California campus and his research focuses on application-specific integrated circuits. He is part of the Institute for NanoSystems Innovation at Northeastern.

Aravind Nagulu, a professor of electrical and computer science, smiling for a headshot. wearing a white blazer and pink button up shirt

NSF CAREER Award To Advance Scalable Quantum Computing

ECE Assistant Professor Aravind Nagulu was awarded a $500,000 NSF CAREER award for “Cryogenic-CMOS and Superconducting Circuits for Scalable Quantum Systems” to address limitations in the hardware infrastructure of quantum computing.

Aravind Nagulu

Enabling Dense and In-Situ Spectrum Sensing for 6G and Beyond

ECE Assistant Professor Aravind Nagulu, in collaboration with Duke University, Oregon State University, and the University of Notre Dame, was awarded a $800,000 NSF grant for “NewSpectrum: Enabling Dense and In-Situ Spectrum Monitoring via Analog Correlators and Circuits-System Co-Design.”

Aravind Nagulu

New Faculty Spotlight: Aravind Nagulu

Aravind Nagulu joins the electrical and computer engineering department in January 2025 as an assistant professor in Oakland, California.