AIM Photonics
Peter Goetz is the Government Chief Scientist and Deputy Program Manager at AIM Photonics. Prior to this, Peter worked as a Research Engineer (Electrical) at Naval Research Laboratory. Peter has experience in optoelectronic device and packaging design, and their research interests include optical phase-locked loop (OPLL) for laser stabilization. Peter also has a background in teaching and has served as a Supervisory Instructor for the US Navy. Peter holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Michigan.
This person is not in any offices
AIM Photonics
1 followers
The American Institute for Manufacturing Integrated Photonics (AIM Photonics), is an industry driven public-private partnership that focuses the nation’s premiere capabilities and expertise to capture critical global manufacturing leadership in a technology that is both essential to national security and positioned to provide a compelling return-on-investment to the U.S. economy. The Institute’s goal is to emulate the dramatic successes experienced by the electronics industry over the past 40 years and transition key lessons, processes, and approaches to the photonic integrated circuit (PIC) industry. AIM Photonics supports small and medium enterprises, providing practical access and technology on-ramps for U.S. industry, government, and academic communities. We are creating a national PIC manufacturing infrastructure, widely accessible and inherently flexible to meet the challenges of the marketplace with practical, innovative solutions. VISION: Establish a technology, business and education framework for industry, government and academia to accelerate the transition of integrated photonic solutions from innovation to manufacturing-ready deployment in systems spanning commercial and defense applications. MISSION: Seek to advance integrated photonic circuit manufacturing technology development while simultaneously providing access to state-of-the-art fabrication, packaging, and testing capabilities for small-to-medium enterprises, academia and the government; create an adaptive integrated photonic circuit workforce capable of meeting industry needs and thus further increasing domestic competitiveness; and meet participating commercial, defense and civilian agency needs in this burgeoning technology area.