Akhlesh Lakhtakia

Akhlesh Lakhtakia is a professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics at the Pennsylvania State University. His research focuses on electromagnetic fields in complex materials, such as sculptured thin films, chiral materials,[1] and bianisotropy.[2] His recent work on industrially scalable bioreplication,[3] an emerging form of engineered biomimicry, has promise for harvesting of solar energy as well as for pest eradication.[4] His technique for visualization of latent fingerprints was covered in a NOVA film in 2012.[5]

Family

Akhlesh Lakhtakia was born in Lucknow, India on July 1, 1957, to Servesh Kumar and Gayatri Devi Lakhtakia. He married Mercedes N. Scabbiolo in 1982, with whom he has a daughter named Natalya Sheetal Lakhtakia.

Education

He was schooled in Lucknow (St. Cathedral School), New Delhi (Cambridge School), and Lucknow (St. Francis' High School). Appearing for final examinations in November 1973, at the end of the 11th grade, he was awarded the Indian School Certificate in 1974.

He obtained a Bachelor of Technology degree in Electronics Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi, India in 1979; Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Utah,[6] Salt Lake City, USA in 1981 and 1983, respectively.

Academic career

In 1983, Lakhtakia joined the faculty of the Pennsylvania State University, where he was elevated to the rank of Distinguished Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics in January 2004. In 2006, he became the Charles Godfrey Binder (Endowed) Professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics.[7]

He has published more than 650 journal articles; has contributed 18 chapters to research books and encyclopedias; has edited, co-edited, authored or co-authored 16 books and 10 conference proceedings; has reviewed for 111 journals; serves on the editorial boards of four electromagnetics journals; was the Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Speculations in Science and Technology from 1993 to 1995; and became the first Editor-in-Chief of the online Journal of Nanophotonics [8] published by SPIE from 2007.

Honors and Awards

He served as an international lecturer for the International Commission for Optics and the Optical Society of America; was twice a Visiting Professor of Physics at Universidad de Buenos Aires, a Visiting Professor of Physics at the University of Otago, a Visiting Fellow in Mathematics at the University of Glasgow, and a Visiting Professor of Physics at Imperial College London from 2004 to 2007; headed the IEEE EMC Technical Committee on Nonsinusoidal Fields from 1992 to 1994; and is a Fellow of Optical Society of America, SPIE, American Physical Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Institute of Physics (UK). He also served as the 1995 Scottish Amicable Visiting Lecturer in mathematics at the University of Glasgow.

He received the PSES Outstanding Research Award in 1996, the PSES Premier Research Award in 2008, and the PSES Outstanding Advising Award in 2005. For his research on sculptured thin films and complex-medium electromagnetics, he received the Faculty Scholar Medal in Engineering in 2005, and a Doctor of Science degree in Electronics Engineering from the Banaras Hindu University in 2006. Nanotech Briefs recognized him in 2006 with a Nano 50 Award for Innovation. The University of Utah made him a Distinguished Alumnus[9][10][11] in 2007, and the Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi in 2014.[12] He was named the winner of the SPIE Technical Achievement Award[13] for the year 2010.

Research Areas

His current research interests lie in the electromagnetics of complex materials, sculptured thin films, carbon nanotubes, nanoengineered metamaterials, biomimetics (especially bioreplication), forensic science, and negative refraction. At Penn State, he co-developed a course on green engineering for undergraduate engineering students, as well as a course on fundamentals of engineering principles and design for pre-service elementary schoolteachers.

Books

References

  1. Lakhtakia, Akhlesh (1994). Beltrami Fields in Chiral Media. Nobel Lecture (Singapore: World Scientific).
  2. Mackay, Tom G.; Lakhtakia, Akhlesh (2010). Electromagnetic Anisotropy and Bianisotropy: A Field Guide. Singapore: World Scientific.
  3. "CNN.com Video". CNN.
  4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1672-6529(13)60207-3
  5. "Forensics on Trial".
  6. http://www.alumni.utah.edu/boards/?display=alumni.php
  7. http://www.esm.psu.edu/~axl4/
  8. http://spie.org/x3650.xml
  9. http://www.alumni.utah.edu/u-news/april07/founders_day.htm
  10. http://www.esm.psu.edu/news/item/325
  11. http://www.itbhu.org/chronicle/archives/2007/04/index.html
  12. http://chicago2014.iitbhuglobal.org/2014/05/21/confirmed-panel-members-research-development-dr-vijay-batra-dr-akhlesh-lakhtakia/
  13. http://spie.org/x40492.xml

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