Michael Proicou

ORCID: 0000-0002-1566-4593
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Spacecraft Design and Technology
  • Embedded Systems Design Techniques
  • Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
  • Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
  • Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
  • Satellite Communication Systems
  • Inertial Sensor and Navigation
  • Real-time simulation and control systems
  • Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
  • Geophysics and Sensor Technology
  • Infrared Target Detection Methodologies
  • Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
  • Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
  • Space Satellite Systems and Control
  • Simulation Techniques and Applications
  • Magnetic confinement fusion research
  • Systems Engineering Methodologies and Applications
  • Water Quality Monitoring Technologies
  • Solar Radiation and Photovoltaics
  • Impact of Light on Environment and Health
  • Calibration and Measurement Techniques
  • Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
  • Earthquake Detection and Analysis
  • Energy Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks
  • Parallel Computing and Optimization Techniques

Los Alamos National Laboratory
2014-2017

U.S. Air Force Institute of Technology
2002

The authors describe a technique for simulating large-scale VHDL (BHSIC hardware description language) models on distributed computer composed of independent processing units communicating via messages. simulation system consists scalable kernel which can support large many concurrent processes. Each statement maps into logical process in the simulated system. provides model-independent functions that handle signal propagation and activation environment. synchronization between individual...

10.1109/naecon.1990.112768 article EN IEEE Conference on Aerospace and Electronics 2002-12-04

Summary form only given. Starting with a simple 3D PIC (particle-in-cell) code named PICEM3, it has been reengineered into prototype where the computational physics issues were purposefully separated from parallel computing issues. The resulting code, PICARD (particle in cell arbitrary rebalancing and decompositions), serves as baseline for testing ideas appropriate particle simulation of plasma behavior. authors have implemented several well-known domain decomposition load balancing...

10.1109/plasma.1993.593471 article EN 1993-01-01
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