Jeremy Everard obtained his degrees from King’s College London and the University of Cambridge, UK in 1976 and 1983 respectively. He worked for six years in industry at GEC Marconi Research Laboratories, M/A-Com and Philips Research Laboratories on Radio and Microwave circuit design. At Philips he ran the Radio Transmitter Project Group. He then taught at King's College London for nine years and became full Professor of Electronics at the University of York in September 1993. He has taught analogue IC design, switched mode PSU & Class D audio amplifier design, optoelectronics, filter design, Electromagnetism and RF & microwave circuit design. In September 2007, he was awarded a five-year research chair in Low Phase Noise Signal Generation sponsored by BAE Systems and the Royal Academy of Engineering. In the RF/Microwave area his research interests include: The theory and design of low noise oscillators; flicker noise measurement and reduction high efficiency broadband amplifiers; high Q printed filters with low radiation loss and broadband negative group delay circuits. In Opto-electronics, research includes: All optical self-routing switches which route data-modulated laser beams according to the destination address encoded within the data signal, ultra-fast 3-wave opto-electronic detectors and mixers and distributed fibre optic temperature sensors. Recent research involves the development of atomic clocks using coherent population trapping (CPT) and pulsed optical pumped (POP), and ultra-low phase noise microwave flywheel oscillator synthesiser chains with micro Hz resolution. He has published a book on 'Fundamentals of RF Circuit Design with Low Noise Oscillators’ (Wiley).
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