Petros Karadimas
petros karadimas

Dr Petros Karadimas

Associate Professor

Biography

Dr. Petros Karadimas was born in Tripolis, Greece. He completed the M.Eng. and Ph.D. degrees from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Patras, Greece, in 2002 and 2008, respectively. From December 2009 to August 2011, he was a Research Fellow with the Centre for Wireless Network Design, University of Bedfordshire, U.K., where, in September 2011, he was appointed a Lecturer in electronic engineering. In August 2016, he was appointed a Lecturer in electrical and electronic engineering with the James Watt School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, U.K., where he established a research group focusing on design and optimization of antenna arrays and MIMO antennas informed by electromagnetic wave propagation and information theory principles. He also led a cross-disciplinary research activity in physical layer security for vehicular communications. He initiated the development and establishment of the Communications Sensing and Imaging research theme of the James Watt School of Engineering, University of Glasgow. Since January 2022, he has been an Associate Professor with the School of Computing, Engineering and the Built Environment, Edinburgh Napier University, U.K.

Dr. Petros Karadimas has received funding by major research councils and organizations including U.K.’s EPSRC and CDE/DSTL. More specifically, he was the Principal Investigator of the CDE/DSTL funded project (~ £100K, January 2016 - March 2016) “CDE41130: Dynamic Cyber-Security Systems over Rapidly Time-Varying Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (VANETs),” developing cryptographic key generation algorithms for vehicular communications. He was also the Principal Investigator of the EPSRC funded project (~ £250K, May 2018 - April 2020) “EP/R041660/1: Bandwidth and Energy Efficient Compact Multi-Antenna Systems for Connected Autonomous Vehicles,” designing and optimizing antenna arrays and MIMO antennas for vehicular communications. His research interests include radio propagation and wireless channel modeling, antenna arrays and MIMO antennas, communication and information theory, and physical layer wireless security and secrecy.

Esteem

Advisory panels and expert committees or witness

  • IEEE Vehicular Technology Society (VTS), Propagation Committee Member

 

Grant Reviewer

  • UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
  • Chile National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT)

 

Invited Speaker

  • MI5-MI6 (London) and GCHQ (Cheltenham) Headquarters, Showcase Events for IoT Security Projects, May 2016

 

Media Activity

  • Greece - UK Strategic Partnership in Education (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qdk5UNoOxSM), Nov. 2022

 

Membership of Professional Body

  • Senior Member IEEE (SMIEEE)
  • Fellow Higher Education Academy (FHEA)

 

Research Degree External Examining

  • University of Bradford, UK
  • University of Patras, Greece
  • The University of Sheffield, UK

 

Reviewing

  • Research Journal Papers (IEEE, IET, Springer)

 

Visiting Positions

  • Affiliate, James Watt School of Engineering, University of Glasgow, U.K., Jan. 2022-Jan. 2024

 

Date


35 results

Simple Closed-Form Channel Capacity Formulas for the SIMO Nakagami Channel

Conference Proceeding
Vagenas, E. D., Karadimas, P., & Kotsopoulos, S. A. (2008)
Simple Closed-Form Channel Capacity Formulas for the SIMO Nakagami Channel. In 2008 IEEE Globecom Workshops. https://doi.org/10.1109/glocomw.2008.ecp.97
This paper presents simple closed-form expressions for the ergodic channel capacity of SIMO (single-input and multiple output) wireless systems operating in a Nakagami fading ...

The Weibull–Lognormal Fading Channel: Analysis, Simulation, and Validation

Journal Article
Karadimas, P., & Kotsopoulos, S. (2009)
The Weibull–Lognormal Fading Channel: Analysis, Simulation, and Validation. IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology, 58(7), 3808-3813. https://doi.org/10.1109/tvt.2008.2002697
In frequency-nonselective fading channels, the partial waves arriving at the mobile receiver cannot explicitly be of homogeneous nature due to nonuniform scattering caused by ...

A Generalized Modified Suzuki Model with Sectored and Inhomogeneous Diffuse Scattering Component

Journal Article
Karadimas, P., & Kotsopoulos, S. A. (2008)
A Generalized Modified Suzuki Model with Sectored and Inhomogeneous Diffuse Scattering Component. Wireless Personal Communications, 47(4), 449-469. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-008-9493-2
This paper presents a mixture stochastic process by multiplying a Weibull process with a lognormal one. The first one models the possible scattering non-uniformities of the ch...

A Small Scale Fading Model with Sectored and Three Dimensional Diffuse Scattering

Conference Proceeding
Karadimas, P., Vagenas, E. D., & Kotsopoulos, S. A. (2008)
A Small Scale Fading Model with Sectored and Three Dimensional Diffuse Scattering. In 2008 5th IEEE Consumer Communications and Networking Conference (943-947). https://doi.org/10.1109/ccnc08.2007.218
In frequency non-selective fading channels the multipath components can arrive at the mobile receiver via a three dimensional (3-D) scattering mechanism. That case occurs espe...

A modified Loo model with sectored and three dimensional multipath scattering

Conference Proceeding
Karadimas, P., & Kotsopoulos, S. (2007)
A modified Loo model with sectored and three dimensional multipath scattering.

Pre-Napier Funded Projects

  • EPSRC-EP/R041660/1 (~ £250K, May 2018 - April 2020) : Bandwidth and Energy Efficient Compact Multi-Antenna Systems for Connected Autonomous Vehicles
  • CDE/DSTL-CDE41130 (~ £100K, January 2016 - March 2016): Dynamic Cyber-Security Systems over Rapidly Time-Varying Vehicular Ad hoc Networks (VANETs)

Non-Napier PhD or MSc by Research supervisions

  • Mahmoud Shawky (University of Glasgow): Serverless Authentication Schemes, 2021-2022
  • Yingke Huang (University of Glasgow): Optimized Antenna Arrays, 2017-2021
  • Mirko Bottarelli (Warwick Manufacturing Group): Cryptographic Key Generation Schemes, part time, 2016-2022
  • Eleftherios Chatziantoniou (University of Bedfordshire): Spectrum Sensing Techniques, 2011-2014