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Show College of Applied Science and Technology 121 EE 3310 - Electromagnetics I Credits: (4) Typically taught: Spring [Full Sem] An introduction to electrostatics, magneto statics and Maxwell's equations with specific applications to wave propagation and transmission line theory. Lecture and lab combination. Laboratory activities to include the design, construction, and analysis of RF radar subsystems. Prerequisite: MATH 2210 , PHYS 2220 , and EE 2260 or EE 3010. EE 3610 - Digital Systems Credits: (4) Typically taught: Fall [Full Sem] Introduction to microprocessor architecture, arithmetic logic units, memory systems, input/output interfaces, peripheral devices, and communication. Lecture and lab combination. Laboratory activities to include the programming and operation of microprocessor circuits. Prerequisite: EE 2700 or EE 3010 and CS 2250 or CS 1410 . EE 3710 - Embedded Systems Credits: (4) Typically taught: Spring [Full Sem] Design and implementation of a microcontroller or microprocessor embedded system including assembly language programming, interfacing to peripherals, interrupt handling and debugging techniques. Lecture and Lab. Laboratory exercises build toward a final embedded systems project. Prerequisite: EE 2700 or EE 3010 , and CS 2250 or CS 1410. EE 3890 - Internship Credits: (2) Typically taught: Fall [Full Sem] Spring [Full Sem] This is a core course that is required for the BS Engineering degree. EE 3890 can be taken a maximum of three times for a total of six credits, but only two credits count toward the major. The student will need department approval before being allowed to register. Prerequisite: Permission from the department. May be repeated 3 times with a maximum of 6 credit hours. EE 4010 - Senior Project I Credits: (2) Typicallv taught: Fall [Full Sem] Students will be required to complete a 200-hour engineering project in a team environment. Project management and problem solving techniques will be emphasized. Topics to include goal setting, developing milestone charts, writing contracts, conducting research, project design and construction, testing and analysis, project documentation, and design review presentations. Prerequisite: Permission from the department. EE 4020 - Senior Project II Credits: (2) Typically taught: Spring [Full Sem] A continuation of Senior Project I. Students will be required to complete a significant engineering project in a team environment. Project management and problem solving techniques will be emphasized. Topics to include goal setting, developing milestone charts, writing contracts, conducting research, project design and construction, testing and analysis, project documentation, and design review presentations. Prerequisite: EE 4010 . EE 4100 - Control Systems Credits: (4) Typically taught: Fall [Full Sem] Topics related to control theory, analysis, and testing of systems in the time domain, frequency domain and state space. Lecture and lab combination. Prerequisite: EE 3120 and EE 3210. EE 4210 - Digital Signal Processing Credits: (3) Typically taught: Summer [Full Sem] Theory, application, and implementation of digital signal processing (DSP) concepts, from the design and implementation perspective. Topics include: Fast Fourier transforms, adaptive filters, state-space algorithms, random signals, and spectral estimation. Prerequisite: EE 3210 . EE 4310 - Electromagnetics II Credits: (3) Typically taught: Spring [Full Sem] A study of intermediate electromagnetic issues common to circuits, systems, and communication networks. Prerequisite: EE 3310. EE 4410 - Communication Circuits and Systems Credits: (3) Typically taught: Fall [Full Sem] A study of communication circuits, modulation and decoding theory, spectrum usage, networks, and protocols. Prerequisite: EE 3210 and MATH 3410 . EE 4800 - Individual Studies Credits: (1-4) The students will receive credit for approved studies in the Electronics Engineering program. A maximum of four credits can count as an elective course in the Electronics Engineering program. EE 4900 - Special Topics Credits: (1-4) A one-time special study course designed to introduce a new relevant topic that is not covered in the EE program. Weber State University 2013-2014 Catalog |