Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”

This article is part of a continuing series of biographical pieces on persons who have made significant and continuous contributions to microwave science, technology, and applications over the course of their careers. It is intended to bring to the reader, especially those new to the field, a portra...

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Main Author: Peter H. Siegel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2021-01-01
Series:IEEE Journal of Microwaves
Subjects:
RoF
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9389588/
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spelling doaj-e5075dc3ca6743aa9f82bf5c4d986c932021-10-07T23:00:53ZengIEEEIEEE Journal of Microwaves2692-83882021-01-011254054910.1109/JMW.2021.30613379389588Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”Peter H. Siegel0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2539-4646THz Global, La Canada, CA, USAThis article is part of a continuing series of biographical pieces on persons who have made significant and continuous contributions to microwave science, technology, and applications over the course of their careers. It is intended to bring to the reader, especially those new to the field, a portrait of an individual who serves as a role model for the community and a detailed description of their accomplishments. At the same time, it tries to bridge with commonality, the experiences of the subject with those of the scientists, engineers and technologists who are following in their footsteps or hope to establish a similar record of success. The articles are composed only after an extensive face-to-face interview with the subject and are helped immensely by additional input and editing by the subjects themselves. The focus of this article is Professor Kam-Yin Lau, who developed the first photonic source capable of high-fidelity optical modulation at 10 GHz and beyond, and successfully introduced photonics into the traditional microwave disciplines. His work during the 1980s enabled hitherto unattainable long-distant (∼50 km) guided transport of microwave signals over optical fibers. These accomplishments helped spur the microwave photonics industry that has transformed both wired and wireless communications networks, and as you will read, several other applications of national and scientific significance. It is appropriate that Professor Lau is the recipient of this year's Microwave Theory and Techniques Society's Microwave Pioneer award for his development and commercialization of RoF (RF-over-Fiber) which launched the microwave photonics industry. As both an industry pioneer and an academic, Professor Lau's accomplishments fit well within the scope of this series. I hope you will both enjoy and learn from his account of where he came from, what motivated his career choices, and the many notable people he interacted with.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9389588/Microwave photonicslaser diode modulationhybrid fiber-coax networksRoFcommunications
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter H. Siegel
spellingShingle Peter H. Siegel
Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
IEEE Journal of Microwaves
Microwave photonics
laser diode modulation
hybrid fiber-coax networks
RoF
communications
author_facet Peter H. Siegel
author_sort Peter H. Siegel
title Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
title_short Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
title_full Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
title_fullStr Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
title_full_unstemmed Microwave Pioneers: Kam Lau, “μWaves Meet Photons”
title_sort microwave pioneers: kam lau, “μwaves meet photons”
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Journal of Microwaves
issn 2692-8388
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This article is part of a continuing series of biographical pieces on persons who have made significant and continuous contributions to microwave science, technology, and applications over the course of their careers. It is intended to bring to the reader, especially those new to the field, a portrait of an individual who serves as a role model for the community and a detailed description of their accomplishments. At the same time, it tries to bridge with commonality, the experiences of the subject with those of the scientists, engineers and technologists who are following in their footsteps or hope to establish a similar record of success. The articles are composed only after an extensive face-to-face interview with the subject and are helped immensely by additional input and editing by the subjects themselves. The focus of this article is Professor Kam-Yin Lau, who developed the first photonic source capable of high-fidelity optical modulation at 10 GHz and beyond, and successfully introduced photonics into the traditional microwave disciplines. His work during the 1980s enabled hitherto unattainable long-distant (∼50 km) guided transport of microwave signals over optical fibers. These accomplishments helped spur the microwave photonics industry that has transformed both wired and wireless communications networks, and as you will read, several other applications of national and scientific significance. It is appropriate that Professor Lau is the recipient of this year's Microwave Theory and Techniques Society's Microwave Pioneer award for his development and commercialization of RoF (RF-over-Fiber) which launched the microwave photonics industry. As both an industry pioneer and an academic, Professor Lau's accomplishments fit well within the scope of this series. I hope you will both enjoy and learn from his account of where he came from, what motivated his career choices, and the many notable people he interacted with.
topic Microwave photonics
laser diode modulation
hybrid fiber-coax networks
RoF
communications
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9389588/
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