Mark Thompson Headshot

Mark Thompson

Adjunct Faculty

College of Engineering Technology

Office Hours
Monday 16:00 -- 17:30 https://rit.zoom.us/j/96515502963?pwd=MzVUYk5lbGxVQXRMeW5hNVFtQlpRZz09 Tuesday 11:00 -- 12:30 https://rit.zoom.us/j/95504663933?pwd=REx6MmQ5MktUSTVIdDlNbDlGeno5QT09 Thursday 11:00 -- 13:00 https://rit.zoom.us/j/92469422597?pwd=M2oxZGE5Sm5PdzNwNGNsSjBQVE1lQT09

Mark Thompson

Adjunct Faculty

College of Engineering Technology

Currently Teaching

EEET-313
3 Credits
Develops the knowledge and ability to design communication electronics, such as AM/FM radios using transistors and integrated circuits. This course applies the concepts of circuits and electronics to basic analog communication circuits for amplitude and frequency modulation. Topics studied are RF Amplifiers, Fourier Analysis, AM and FM transmission and reception, phase-locked loops, synthesizers, oscillators, DSB and SSB communication systems, antennas and EM wave propagation. The course’s laboratory component Provides experience in the practice and application of the concepts of circuits and electronics to basic analog communication circuits for amplitude and frequency modulation in a laboratory environment. Construction and measurement are emphasized. Student must register for BOTH the Lecture and Laboratory components of this course.
EEET-425
4 Credits
Develops the knowledge and ability to process signals using Digital Signal Processing (DSP) techniques. Starts with foundational concepts in sampling, probability, statistics, noise, fixed and floating point number systems, and describes how they affect real world performance of DSP systems. Fundamental principles of convolution, linearity, duality, impulse responses, and discrete fourier transforms are used to develop FIR and IIR digital filters and to explain DSP techniques such as windowing. Students get an integrated lab experience writing DSP code that executes in real-time on DSP hardware.