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Solomon W Golomb

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Solomon Golomb

Alma mater
  
Harvard University

Role
  
Mathematician


Doctoral advisor
  
David Widder

Children
  
Astrid Golomb

Fields
  
Mathematics, Engineering

Solomon W. Golomb httpswwwsigmaxiorgimagesdefaultsourceProg


Born
  
May 30, 1932 (age 91) Baltimore, Maryland (
1932-05-30
)

Institutions
  
University of Southern California

Education
  
Balti City College, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University

Awards
  
National Medal of Science, Claude E. Shannon Award

Notable awards
  
Claude E. Shannon Award, IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal, National Medal of Science

Books
  
Shift register sequences, Signal Design for Good Cor, Basic Concepts in Informa, Polyominoes

Doctoral students
  
Hal Fredricksen

Solomon w golomb 2016 laureate of the franklin institute in electrical engineering


Solomon Wolf Golomb (; May 30, 1932 – May 1, 2016) was an American mathematician, engineer, and professor of electrical engineering at the University of Southern California, best known for his works on mathematical games. Most notably, he invented Cheskers in 1948 and coined the name. He also fully described polyominoes and pentominoes in 1953. He specialized in problems of combinatorial analysis, number theory, coding theory, and communications. His game of pentomino inspired Tetris.

Contents

Solomon W. Golomb Mathematician and engineer Solomon Wolf Golomb is a 2011

Academic achievements

Solomon W. Golomb Solomon W Golomb Press Room USC

Golomb, a graduate of the Baltimore City College high school, received his bachelor's degree from Johns Hopkins University and master's and doctorate degree in mathematics from Harvard University in 1957 with a dissertation on "Problems in the Distribution of the Prime Numbers".

Solomon W. Golomb Solomon Golomb pioneering scholar of mathematics and engineering

While working at the Glenn L. Martin Company he became interested in communications theory and began his work on shift register sequences. He spent his Fulbright year at the University of Oslo and then joined the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Caltech, where he researched military and space communications. He joined the faculty of USC in 1963 and was awarded full tenure two years later.

Solomon W. Golomb Solomon W Golomb 2016 Laureate of the Franklin Institute in

Golomb pioneered the identification of the characteristics and merits of maximum length shift register sequences, also known as pseudorandom or pseudonoise sequences, which have extensive military, industrial and consumer applications. Today, millions of cordless and cellular phones employ pseudorandom direct-sequence spread spectrum implemented with shift register sequences. His efforts made USC a center for communications research.

Golomb was the inventor of Golomb coding, a form of entropy encoding. Golomb rulers, used in astronomy and in data encryption, are also named for him, as is one of the main generation techniques of Costas arrays, the Lempel-Golomb generation method.

He was a regular columnist, writing Golomb's Puzzle Column in the IEEE Information Society Newsletter. He was also a frequent contributor to Scientific American's Mathematical Games column and a frequent participant in Gathering 4 Gardner conferences. Among his contributions to recreational mathematics are Rep-tiles. He also contributed a puzzle to each issue of the Johns Hopkins Magazine, a monthly publication of his undergraduate alma mater, for a column called "Golomb's Gambits", and was a frequent contributor to Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics.

Awards

Golomb was a member of both the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Science.

In 1985, he received the Shannon Award of the Information Theory Society of the IEEE.

In 1992, he received the medal of the U.S. National Security Agency for his research, and has also been the recipient of the Lomonosov Medal of the Russian Academy of Science and the Kapitsa Medal of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.

In 2000, he was awarded the IEEE Richard W. Hamming Medal for his exceptional contributions to information sciences and systems. He was singled out as a major figure of coding and information theory for over four decades, specifically for his ability to apply advanced mathematics to problems in digital communications.

Golomb was one of the first high profile professors to attempt the Ronald K. Hoeflin Mega IQ power test, which originally appeared in Omni Magazine. He scored at least IQ 176, which represents 11,000,000 of the unselected population.

In 2012, he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society. That same year, it was announced that he had been selected to receive the National Medal of Science. In 2014, he was elected as a fellow of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics "for contributions to coding theory, data encryption, communications, and mathematical games."

In 2013, he was awarded the National Medal of Science 2011.

In 2016, he was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Electrical Engineering "for pioneering work in space communications and the design of digital spread spectrum signals, transmissions that provide security, interference suppression, and precise location for cryptography; missile guidance; defense, space, and cellular communications; radar; sonar; and GPS."

Selected books

  • Signal Design for Good Correlation (ISBN 0-521-82104-5)
  • Polyominoes, Princeton University Press; 2nd edition 1996, ISBN 0-691-02444-8
  • Shift Register Sequences, San Francisco, Holden-Day, 1967. ISBN 0-89412-048-4
  • References

    Solomon W. Golomb Wikipedia