Husni Rois Ali
Assistant Prof at The Department of Electrical and Information Engineering (DTETI),
Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM), Indonesia
Office address:
The Department of Electrical and Information Engineering (DTETI)
Komplek Fakultas Teknik UGM
Jl. Grafika No.2, Yogyakarta, Sendowo, Sinduadi, Kec. Mlati, Kota Yogyakarta
Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta Indonesia 55281
Email:
husni.rois.ali(at)ugm.ac.id or h.ali15(at)alumni.imperial.ac.uk
I was born in Sleman, Yogyakarta, on February 09, 1987. I went to SMA N 1 Teladan Yogyakarta. In 2009, I received my bachelor degree from the department of electrical engineering UGM. Then in 2013, I received my master degree under the supervision Dr. Naebboon Hoonchareon in the area of power system dynamic, stability and control. In 2019, I obtained my PhD at Control and Power Research Group, Imperial College London, UK under the supervision of Prof. Bikash C. Pal. I consider myself lucky enough to be in his research group as his group won President’s Award for Outstanding Research Team. My Ph.D topic is model order reduction of large-scale wind farms.
At the moment, I am holding a position as a lecturer and assistant Prof at The Department of Electrical and Information Engineering (DTETI) UGM. I’m the current Vice-chair of Electrical Engineering Undergraduate Program.
I am also a senior member of IEEE (SM IEEE) as well as serve as associate editor for IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Energy, Journal of Modern Power Systems and Clean Energy and IEEE Open Access Journal of Power and Energy
I married to Anisah in 2011. We’re blessed with two wonderfull kids
You can find me in more detail as follows:
2019: Ph.D and DIC
Imperial College London, UK
Thesis title: Model order reduction of wind farms
2013: M.Eng
Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Thesis title: Real-Time Monitoring of Inter-Area Power Oscillations Using Phasor Measurement Units
2009: B.Eng
Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
Thesis title: Simulation of Small Signal Stability of Single Machine Connected to an Infinite Bus System