Kang L. Wang
Kang L. Wang | |||||||
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| Born | 1942 (age 83–84) Lukang, Changhua, Taiwan | ||||||
| Alma mater | National Cheng Kung University (BS) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MS, PhD) | ||||||
| Children | 3, including Evelyn | ||||||
| Scientific career | |||||||
| Fields | Electrical engineering | ||||||
| Institutions | University of California, Los Angeles Academia Sinica | ||||||
| Thesis | Electron impact ionization cross sections for carbon vapor (1970) | ||||||
| Doctoral advisor | C. K. Crawford | ||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||
| Chinese | 王康隆 | ||||||
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Kang Lung Wang (Chinese: 王康隆; born 1941) is a Taiwanese physicist and electrical engineer specializing in nanotechnology, semiconductors, and quantum systems. He is the Raytheon Chair in Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he leads its Device Research Laboratory. He was previously a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).