Karlton Powell
Principal Researcher (Alum)
Karlton Powell joined the Applied Sciences Group coming from Microsoft Surface. Before joining Surface, he was a research engineer at Microvision, Inc., working on various scanned-beam laser displays, such as HMDs (helmet-mounted displays), HUDs (head-up displays), and pocket-sized laser projectors, primarily focused in the areas of beam propagation, diffractive optics and micro-optics, interference, speckle, and photonics.
Powell received a Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering Physics from Abilene Chrisitian University in 1990, and a Master of Science degree in Physics from the University of Texas at Arlington in 1992. He then began his career at Fresnel Technologies in Ft. Worth as a precision engineer working with precision machining, diamond turning, and design & fabrication of micro-optics, surfaces, and Fresnel optics.
Powell later joined Ball Semiconductor in Allen, TX in 1998 as a research and optical engineer, working with spherical lithography.
Besides being a trombonist, Powell has been known to musically play saw (yes, cross-cut), he enjoys spending time with his three sons, there is a 14-foot CNC quilting machine in his livingroom (yes, he married a quilter), he used to assist his father in restoring pipe organs such as one located in the Strand theatre of Shreveport which is practically a lost art, and the getaway vehicle for his wedding was a helicopter, yes a helicopter…now that’s cool.
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The IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) Workshops June, 2020
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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces September, 2015 Edition: 2015 Vol. 7, No. 39 Pages 21628-21633 ISBN: 978-1-60558-745-5