Faculty

Kevin Moore, Professor

Texas A&M University, Ph.D.

Faculty Member Professor Moore is the G.A. Dobelman Distinguished Chair and Professor of Engineering. He is a well-known researcher in the areas of autonomous control and robotics, with a particular focus on the subject of iterative learning control.

Homepage - http://inside.mines.edu/~kmoore/
Kevin L. Moore is the G.A. Dobelman Distinguished Chair and Professor of Engineering in the Division of Engineering at the Colorado School of Mines. He received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from Louisiana State University and the University of Southern California, respectively. He received the Ph.D. in electrical engineering, with an emphasis in control theory, from Texas A&M University in 1989. He has been a senior scientist at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory during a one-year research, where he worked in the area of unattended air vehicles, cooperative control, and autonomous systems (2004-2005) an Associate Professor at Idaho State University (1989-1998) and a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Utah State University, where he was the Director of the Center for Self-Organizing and Intelligent Systems, directing multi-disciplinary research teams of students and professionals developing a variety of autonomous robots for government and commercial applications (1998-2004). He also worked in industry for three years pre-Ph.D as a member of the technical staff at Hughes Aircraft Company. His research interests include iterative learning control , autonomous systems and robotics, and applications of control to industrial and mechatronic systems.

He is the co-author of the research monograph Iterative Learning Control: Robustness and Monotonic Convergence for Interval Systems, author of the research monograph Iterative Learning Control for Deterministic Systems, and co-author of the book Sensing, Modeling, and Control of Gas Metal Arc Welding. He is a professional engineer, involved in several professional societies and editorial activities, and is interested in engineering education pedagogy, particularly capstone senior design. He is a senior member of IEEE and serves as a member of the IFAC Technical Committee on Computers, Communications, and Telematics, on the IEEE Control System Society Technical Committee on Intelligent Control, and a number of editorial boards.

Current Courses - Fall 2009
EGGN307 - Intro To Feedback Control Systems