Phd

I am a graduate student with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering atRutgers University, NJ. I am pursuing my Ph.D under the guidance of Dr. Dario Pompili at theCyber Physical Systems Laboratory, Rutgers University, NJ. I received my M.Sc. and B.Sc. from Sharif University of Technology and Shahid Beheshti University (Tehran, Iran), respectively. In my Master's thesis, I worked on application of blind source separation in image watermarking. Currently, I am working on provisioning and allocation of virtual base stations in the Cloud Radio Access Network (C-RAN).
Çağdaş joined the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at Rutgers University in 2012. He is currently under the guidance of Dr. Dario Pompili as a member of the Cyber Physical Systems Laboratory (CPS Lab). He obtained his Master's in Computer Engineering from Ege University, Turkey under the guidance of Dr. Aylin Kantarci. During his Master's his research was focussed on Fountain codes in MANETS. He also worked for companies CVM, Vestel.
Eun Kyung Lee joined in 2009 as a Ph.D student in Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at Rutgers University. He is currently under guidance of professor Dario Pompili as a memeber of Cyber Physical Systems Laboratory (CPS Lab), and conducting research supported by Center for Autonomic Computing (CAC) an NSF research center. His research interests include Ad hoc Networking and Green Computing. He is an IEEE and ACM student member.
Fan is a PhD student of ECE Department at Rutgers University supervised by Prof. Manish Parashar. His current research focuses on building the programming and runtime support for enabling the execution of in-situ/in-transit scientific data processing workflow on emerging multi-core parallel architectures. Generally, Fan is interested in data management, programming framework for data analysis/processing on large scale HPC systems.
Hari is a graduate student with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University, NJ. He started his Ph.D under the guidance of Dr. Dario Pompili at the Center for Autonomic Computing, Rutgers University in 2009. Previously, he worked on evaluation of radio resource and spectrum management algorithms on 802.11n devices in collaboration with Thomson Corporate Research (now Technicolor), NJ for his Master's thesis. He obtained his Bachelor's Degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering from PSG College of Technology, Coimbatore, India. He is an IEEE student member.
Mahmoud Ramezani Mayiami will join the CPS lab from Fall'13. 
Mehdi Rahmati will join CPS lab from Fall'13. 
Mohammad joined Rutgers University as a PhD student in Fall 2012.  He received his Masters degree in Electrical engineering from Sharif University of Technology in Iran.  He is currently working under supervision of Prof Pompili as a member of Cyber Physical System Laboratory (CPS). His research interests are in Wireless and Optical communications systems and networks and is currently working on underwater acoustic communications protocols. 
Moustafa AbdelBaky is a PhD student at Rutgers University and an IBM PhD Fellow. He received his undergraduate degree from the Rutgers School of Engineering with a major in Electrical & Computer Engineering, and a major in Computer Science. His past research experiences include DISCOVER, an interactive portal for interactive steering of scientific applications, using virtual reality for rehabilitation at the Human-Machine Interface Lab at Rutgers University in collaboration with Indiana University School of medicine, mobile development in collaboration with Bloomberg LP, experiments with Single Electron Transistors and nano technology at Rutgers University, and the development of ElVis (A Scientific Graphics for Visualization and Monitoring Software) in collaboration with Princeton's University Plasma Physics Laboratory. He is currently working with IBM T.J. Watson Research Center on developing a framework that integrates IBM's Blue Gene supercomputer with public clouds, mobile and desktop peripherals to provide HPC as-a-service. He is also working CometCloud, an autonomic cloud engine build on top of a robust and scalable overlay, which provides programming platforms (MapReduce, Workflow, Master/Worker/BOT) that run on dynamically federated HPC (HPC cluster, BlueGene/P) and Cloud infrastructure (Amazon EC2). Finally he is working on providing HPC as-a-service on all three levels (infrastructure, platform, and software as a service) using hybrid infrastructure such as Open Science Grid, Amazon EC2, Future Grid, and XSEDE.
She is a graduate student with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University, NJ. She is pursuing her Ph.D under the guidance of Dr. Dario Pompili at the Center for Autonomic Computing, Rutgers University, NJ. She obtained her Master's Degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from The University of Utah. Her advisors were Dr. Adam Bolton and Dr. Neal Patwari. She obtained her Bachelor's Degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering from Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology, Delhi, India.

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MS

Anirudh Rathi is a Masters student in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University since Fall 2010. He received his Bachelor's degree in Computer Engineering from Mumbai University, India in 2008. His research interests are in the area of Parallel and Distributed computing including Cloud/Grid computing and Autonomic computing. Prior to coming to Rutgers, he was working with Amdocs Development Center India (DVCI) in Pune, India as a Subject Matter Expert. His profile involved working on Amdocs Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software. He is currently working on the Comet Cloud infrastructure under the guidance of Dr. Hyunjoo Kim and Dr. Manish Parashar.
Karthik Elangovan is a Graduate student in Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey since Fall of 2009. He completed his undergraduate degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from SSN College of Engineering, Chennai. Currently, he is working in energy-efficient desingns for multi-core architectures.
Nileema Shingte is a Masters student at Rutgers University. She received her Undergraduate degree from Pune University, India with a major in Computer Science. Her research interests are parallel and distributed computing and cloud computing. She has worked as on a project, “Grid Enabled Unit Testing” as an intern at C-DAC, Pune. She has also worked as a Program Manager with Microsoft (Hyderabad). She is currently working on the infrastructure for Comet Cloud.
Samprita Hegde is a Master's student in Computer Engineering at Rutgers University. Her research interests are Parallel and Distributed Programming, Software Engineering. Prior to coming to Rutgers she was a software engineer at Delphi Automotive systems, Bangalore India. Her work there involved developing embedded software for Automotive Multimedia Systems (Eg; designing HMI for Car radios, Programming Digital Signal Processors,drivers for Audio amplifiers etc). She is currently working on Hadoop -Map reduce framework , designing a pull based task scheduling mechanism using the Comet Co-ordination Engine.
Sharat Chandra is a Masters student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University since September 2009. He recieved his Bachelors degree in Electronics and Communication from Vishweshvariah Technological University, Karnataka, India in 2008. His research interests are in the area of High Performance Computing, Distributed Systems and Application level Power Management in Clustered environments. He is working under Professor Manish Parashar in CAC@Rutgers(Center For Autonomic Computing) on Application Aware Power Management of HPC Workloads.
Siddharth Wagh is a graduate student at Rutgers University pursuing Masters in Electrical and Computer Engineering since Fall 2007. He is currently engaged in his research thesis on ‘Autonomic Utility-based Virtual Machine Management’ under the able guidance of Dr. Manish Parashar at TASSL, Rutgers. He completed his Bachelors in Electronics Engineering from VJTI, Mumbai University, India in May 2007. His research interests focus on Computer Networking and Virtualization. Presently, he is working on XEN virtual platform seeking to automate management of guest virtual machines using utility-based policies to optimize system performance. He is familiar with high throughput, low latency server technology InfiniBand and the RDMA abstraction. Apart from research, he has been involved in academic projects like Software Design of a Routing Protocol to multicast in a homogenous network, Optimization of knapsack problems for system resource management and Software Design of a Web Application for stock market prediction. Additionally, he is a Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA) since October 2009.

Undergraduate

Aditya Devarakonda is an Undergraduate student in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rutgers University since Fall 2008. He is currently doing a double major in Computer Science and Computer Engineering. His research interests are in the areas of High Performance Computing, Cloud/Grid Computing and Green Computing. He is currently doing research on the performance evaluation of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model using MPI under the guidance of Dr.Ivan Rodero and Dr.Manish Parashar. He is also working in collaboration with IBM, FIU and Dr.Ivan Rodero on research in developing WRF as a service in a collaborative Cloud domain.
Eytan Biala is an Undergraduate Computer Science major at Rutgers University. His research interests are in the areas of High Performance Computing and Cloud/Grid Computing.
Pramod Kulkarni is currently an undergraduate student (Class of 2010) in The Applied Software Systems Laboratory in the Center for Autonomic Computing at the Rutgers University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He received the Rutgers Academic Excellence Award for being in the top 10% of Rutgers undergraduates, and is a recipient of the Department of Defense SMART Scholarship. Pramod has worked on application and middleware layer power management in parallel computing environments for high performance computing workloads. His research interests are in the field of autonomic computing and include parallel and distributed systems, networks, and cloud computing. He is also interested in agent-based biologically inspired autonomic computing techniques, such as swarm intelligence.

   

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