Polina Bayvel

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Born (1966-04-14) 14 April 1966 (age 60)[1]
CitizenshipBritish
AlmamaterUniversity College London (BSc, PhD)
Polina Bayvel
Bayvel in 2016
Born (1966-04-14) 14 April 1966 (age 60)[1]
CitizenshipBritish
EducationHasmonean High School for Girls[1]
Alma materUniversity College London (BSc, PhD)
ChildrenTwo
AwardsClifford Paterson Lecture (2014)
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsNortel
Standard Telephones and Cables
University College London
ThesisStimulated Brillouin scattering in single mode optical fibre ring resonators (1990)
Websitewww.ee.ucl.ac.uk/staff/academic/pbayvel

Dame Polina Leopoldovna Bayvel (Russian: Полина Леопольдовна Байвель; born 14 April 1966)[1] is a British engineer and academic. She is currently Professor of Optical Communications & Networks in the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at University College London.[3] She has made major contributions to the investigation and design of high-bandwidth multiwavelength optical networking.[4][5]

Bayvel was born into a Jewish family,[6] and grew up in Kharkiv and Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) until 1978.[7] Her father is the physicist Leopold P. Bayvel, her mother Raisa (Rachel) was a textile/pattern technologist/garment engineer and later published studies in Eastern-European Jewish history.[8]

She was educated in England at Hasmonean High School for Girls[1] and University College London where she was awarded a Bachelor of Engineering degree in 1986 followed by a PhD in 1990.[9] In 1990, she was awarded a Royal Society Postdoctoral Exchange Fellowship in the Fibre Optics Laboratory at the General Physics Institute [ru] of the Soviet Academy of Sciences in Moscow.[10]

Research and career

Bayvel's research has focused on maximising the speed and capacity of optical fibre communication systems, and the fundamental studies of capacity-limiting optical nonlinearities and their mitigation.[4][11][12][13] She has made major contributions to the investigation and design of high-bandwidth, multi-wavelength optical communication networks.[14]

She was one of the first to show the feasibility of using the wavelength domain for routing in optical networks over a range of distance- and time-scales. She has established the applicability of these new optical network architecture concepts, which have been widely implemented in commercial systems and networks. These systems and networks underpin the Internet, and the digital communications infrastructure – and are essential for its growth.[4] A new project, the Initiate project, aims to test technologies that will make internet connections faster and more secure, which Polina Bayvel indicated will allow them to test them at a national scale.[15] Her research has been funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).[16]

Awards and honours

Personal life

References

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