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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, May 10, 2010

UH Manoa graduate student awarded prestigious engineering fellowship


Wayne Shiroma
Reader Submitted

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Reece Iwami

Reece Iwami

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Reece T. Iwami, a UH Manoa graduate student in electrical engineering, will receive a prestigious Graduate Fellowship from the Microwave Theory and Techniques Society (MTT-S) of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He will receive his award at the IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium in Anaheim, California later this month.

The IEEE MTT-S Graduate Fellowship is an internationally competitive award whose recipients are selected on the basis of a research proposal and academic potential, and consists of a $6,000 fellowship and travel funding to the awards presentation. Since its inception over 20 years ago, the only other UH Manoa recipient that won this award was Grant S. Shiroma in 2004, who eventually earned his PhD. This year, eight awards were made from among 27 applications. Iwami is one of only two awardees from the U.S.

"This is great news not only for Reece, but also for all UH Manoa engineering students as it shows that we have very talented students who can compete at the international level," said Ryan Miyamoto, senior engineer at Oceanit and chair of the IEEE MTT-S Hawaii Chapter. Miyamoto supported Iwami's application by attesting to the strength of UH Manoa's microwave engineering program.

Iwami's research involves the development of autonomous, self-steering antenna arrays for emerging satellite technologies for reconnaissance and crisis management applications. He currently directs a team of 12 students on a $400,000 extramurally funded project adapting these antennas for nanosatellites. Within the first month of becoming a graduate student, Iwami led a team of three other graduate students on a $30,000 extramurally funded project that investigated the use of self-steering antennas for search-and-rescue applications. Iwami will be presenting a paper on his research at this month's IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium, the largest and most prestigious conference in the microwave field.

"These are very impressive achievements for someone who hasn't even completed his first year of graduate studies," said Wayne Shiroma, professor of electrical engineering who serves as Iwami's research advisor. "This is just a continuing trend of what Reece has already demonstrated."

As a UH Manoa undergraduate, Iwami was the recipient of both the UH Regents Scholarship and National Consortium for Measurement and Signature Intelligence Research Fellowship programs. He also co-wrote a proposal that helped UH Manoa win a competitive $110,000 extramurally funded award from the University Nanosat Program. Iwami's undergraduate work in nanosatellites resulted in three publications, plus a forthcoming chapter in a book published by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Iwami also served as president of the UH Chapter of the Eta Kappa Nu Electrical Engineering Honor Society, which recently won an outstanding chapter award for activities carried out during his presidency. In view of his accomplishments, the Hawaii Council of Engineering Societies recognized Iwami as its 2009 Student Engineer of the Year, having selected him from the pool of all 2008-09 graduating seniors in all engineering disciplines in Hawaii. Iwami was also selected as the Spring 2009 Outstanding Graduating Senior in Electrical Engineering.