Difference between revisions of "Norman Margolus"

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#REDIRECT [[Margolus neighbourhood]]
{{Person|name=Norman Margolus|born=1955|nat=Canadian, American|alma=Massachusetts Institute of Technology|inst=Massachusetts Institute of Technology}}
'''Norman Margolus''' is a computer scientist who did pioneering work in [[cellular automata]]. In the 1980s, he invented the [[block cellular automaton]] and, in the process, invented the [[Margolus neighborhood]]. In 1987, he and [[Tommaso Toffoli]] created Critters, a reversible block cellular automaton with similar dynamics to [[Life]].
 
In 1987, he and [[Tommaso Toffoli]] co-authored ''Cellular Automata Machines'', in which they explore computer architecture optimized to simulate cellular automata, and describe the CAM-6 accelerator, a PC-compatible expansion board designed to simulate cellular automata, which was manufactured in limited quantities by Systems Concepts due to production problems.
 
== External links ==
* {{LinkWikipedia|Norman_Margolus|name=Norman Margolus}}
* {{LinkWikipedia|Critters_(cellular_automaton)|name=Critters (cellular automaton)}}
* [https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262526319/cellular-automata-machines/ Cellular Automata Machines], Tommaso Toffoli and Norman Margolus, MIT Press, 1987
* {{MathGenealogy|id=204272|title=Norman Margolus}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Margolus, Norman}}

Latest revision as of 18:24, 13 December 2022

Norman Margolus
Born 1955
Residence Unknown
Nationality Canadian, American
Institutions Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Alma mater Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Norman Margolus is a computer scientist who did pioneering work in cellular automata. In the 1980s, he invented the block cellular automaton and, in the process, invented the Margolus neighborhood. In 1987, he and Tommaso Toffoli created Critters, a reversible block cellular automaton with similar dynamics to Life.

In 1987, he and Tommaso Toffoli co-authored Cellular Automata Machines, in which they explore computer architecture optimized to simulate cellular automata, and describe the CAM-6 accelerator, a PC-compatible expansion board designed to simulate cellular automata, which was manufactured in limited quantities by Systems Concepts due to production problems.

External links