Detectability of Breast Tumor by a Hand-held Impulse-Radar Detector: Performance Evaluation and Pilot Clinical Study

#Impulse #Radar #Breast #Health #SAR
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A hand-held impulse-radar breast cancer detector is presented and the detectability of malignant breast tumors is demonstrated in the clinical test at Hiroshima University Hospital. The core function of the detector consists of 65 nm technology CMOS integrated circuits covering the ultrawideband width from 3.1 to for 10.6 GHz, which enable the generation and transmission of Gaussian monocycle pulse with the pulse width of 160 ps, the equivalent time sampling at 100 GS/s and the single port eight throw switching matrices for controlling the combination of 4x4 cross-shaped antenna array.



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  • Date: 22 Oct 2018
  • Time: 03:15 PM to 04:30 PM
  • All times are (UTC-07:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
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  • 10155 Pacific Heights Blvd, San Diego, CA 92121
  • Qualcomm Building AZ Auditorium
  • San Diego, California
  • United States

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  • Starts 16 October 2018 03:00 PM
  • Ends 22 October 2018 03:15 PM
  • All times are (UTC-07:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. Takamaro Kikkawa

Biography:

Takamaro Kikkawa received the Ph.D. degree in electronic system from Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan. He was a Visiting Scientist at MIT. He has been with NEC Corporation, Tokyo, Japan, where he conducted the research and development on the interconnect technologies for logic ULSI and DRAM. He is currently Professor of the Research Institute for Nanodevice and Bio Systems, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan. He is Life Fellow of the IEEE and Fellow of Japan Society of Applied Physics.





Agenda

3:00-3:15pm  Sign-in and networking

3:15-4:30pm  Seminar and Q&A