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  1. Professor Charles G. Smith has worked on nano-electrical and nano-mechanical devices since 1985 [1]. He pioneered electrical transport work on GaAs quantum dots [2] and techniques for measuring single electron charge movement in those dots, initially at low frequencies [3] and more recently high frequencies readout techniques for quantum ...

  2. Prof. Charles G. Smith. Department of Physics, University of Cambridge. Verified email at cam.ac.uk - Homepage. Quantum transport in Nanoelectronic devices NEMS. Articles 1–20.

  3. Sei Morikawa, Ziwei Dou, Shu-Wei Wang, Charles G Smith, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Satoru Masubuchi, Tomoki Machida, Malcolm R Connolly. Applied Physics Letters 107 (24), 243102 (2015). “Imaging ballistic carrier trajectories in graphene using scanning gate microscopy”

  4. Charles G. Smith (A'00) received the physics degree from the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, in 1982 and the Ph.D. degree in physics from the University of Cambridge, U.K., in 1987. He became a lecturer in the University of Cambridge Physics Department in 1995 and was made a Reader in nanoelectronic devices in 2001.

  5. Charles Grover Smith sudied mathematics and physics at Harvard after graduating from the University of Texas. At Harvard, he worked under Theodore Lyman in the spectroscopy of helium gas.

  6. www.clarehall.cam.ac.uk › directory › smith-cCharles Smith - Clare Hall

    Professorial Fellow. Subject: Physics, Semiconductor Physics. Department/institution: Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Contact details: cgs4@cam.ac.uk. Professor Charles G. Smith. Professor Smith has worked on nano-electrical and nano-mechanical devices since 1985.

  7. You can see the full profile for Professor Charles G. Smith here. Real name: Charles G. Smith. Name: Charles G. Smith.