Sine Scientific Instruments Receives Order for Multiple Lock-in Amplifiers from University of Wisconsin.
OE1022D has been used in SQUID scanning microscope measurements by The Witzman Institute of Israel. Witzman Institute has purchased more than 10 scion scientific Instruments lock-In amplifiers. This type of phase-locked amplifier has been approved by Witzman Institute of Israel, as detailed in the user comments below.
The order for lock-in amplifiers from the Department of Electrical Engineering of CityU is not only a sign of the superior performance and good reputation of Sine Scientific Instrument's lock-in amplifiers in the industry, but also a sign of the wide applicability and scientific significance of the lock-in amplifiers in the field of electrical and electronic engineering and other experiments.
The OE1022 Lock-in Amplifier of Sine Scientific Instruments' research team has been ordered by the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the University of Toronto, which is very satisfied with the performance of the received instrument and indicated that further cooperation will be carried out.
The OE1022D lock-in amplifier designed by SSI obtained an order from the Weizman Institute of Science in Israel. The team was satisfied with the performance of the instrument and indicated that they would have further cooperation with SSI in the future.
The 2019 MRS (Materials Research Society) autumn conference and exhibition was held from December 1 to 6, 2019 at the Hayes Convention Center in Boston, Massachusetts.
SSI and Princeton Instruments will communicate and cooperate with each other.
MIT(Massachusetts Institute of Technology) located in the United States invited Dr. Jack Wang, founder of SSI, to cooperate with MIT as a visiting scientist.
On October 25, 2019, SSI once again ushered in exciting team building activities.
Steve Mann is a tenured professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto, a full-time visiting professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, and is internationally recognized as one of the founders of wearable computing, and is known as the "Father of Wearable Computing".

