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Microelectronics: When the Enabler Becomes the Bottleneck

Microelectronics spans a broad stack from materials and devices to circuits, architectures, and integrated systems, all of which are essential to modern scientific instrumentation. Across fields such as photon science and high-energy physics, advances in microelectronics have enabled new experimental capabilities, from highly segmented detectors to ultrafast, low-noise readout systems. However, as these systems scale, microelectronics increasingly defines the limits of what is possible. As next-generation facilities push toward extreme data rates, challenges in bandwidth, latency, and energy consumption shift attention toward how efficiently information is extracted from measured signals. This colloquium examines the role of microelectronics across these layers, with particular emphasis on circuits and architectures that govern data movement and system-level performance. Through representative examples, it illustrates how architectural choices in data reduction, processing, and control are being rethought to address emerging system-level constraints. The talk concludes by outlining opportunities for cross-layer co-design and key research challenges for future data-intensive scientific instruments.

Speaker: Angelo Dragone, Stanford and SLAC

Attend in person or watch online (see weblink)

Monday, 05/11/26

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

Free

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Stanford Linear Accelerator (SLAC) Colloquium Series

2575 Sand Hill Rd, Building 51
Kavli Auditorium
Menlo Park, CA 94025