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Norman Margolus is a Canadian-American physicist and computer scientist. He was born in 1955 in the United States. He received his B.A. in physics from Harvard University in 1977 and his Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983. Margolus is best known for his work on cellular automata, a type of computer simulation. He has also worked on quantum computing, artificial life, and artificial intelligence. He is currently a research scientist at the MIT Media Lab. Margolus has received numerous awards for his work, including the ACM Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award in 2002, the IEEE John von Neumann Medal in 2003, and the ACM/IEEE-CS Ken Kennedy Award in 2006. As of 2021, Norman Margolus's net worth is estimated to be roughly $1 million.

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Norman Margolus Height, Weight & Measurements

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Norman Margolus Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Norman Margolus worth at the age of 68 years old? Norman Margolus’s income source is mostly from being a successful Computer. He is from United States. We have estimated Norman Margolus's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1987

With Tommaso Toffoli, Margolus developed the CAM-6 cellular automaton simulation hardware, which he extensively described in his book with Toffoli, Cellular Automata Machines (MIT Press, 1987), and with Tom Knight he developed the "Flattop" integrated circuit implementation of billiard-ball computation. He has also done pioneering research on the reversible quantum gate logic needed to support quantum computers.

Margolus received his Ph.D. in physics in 1987 from MIT, under the supervision of Edward Fredkin. He founded and was chief scientist for Permabit, an information storage device company.

1982

Margolus was one of the organizers of a seminal research meeting on the connections between physics and computation theory, held on Mosquito Island in 1982. He is known for inventing the block cellular automaton and the Margolus neighborhood for block cellular automata, which he used to develop cellular automaton simulations of billiard-ball computers. In the same work, Margolus also showed that the billiard ball model could be simulated by a second-order cellular automaton, a different type of cellular automaton invented by his thesis advisor, Edward Fredkin. These two simulations were among the first cellular automata that were both reversible (able to be run backwards as well as forwards for any number of time steps, without ambiguity) and universal (able to simulate the operations of any computer program); this combination of properties is important in low-energy computing, as it has been shown that the energy dissipation of computing devices may be made arbitrarily small if and only if they are reversible. In connection with this issue, Margolus and his co-author Lev B. Levitin proved the Margolus–Levitin theorem showing that the speed of any computer is limited by the fundamental laws of physics to be at most proportional to its energy use; this implies that ultra-low-energy computers must run more slowly than conventional computers.

1955

Norman H. Margolus (born 1955) is a Canadian-American physicist and computer scientist, known for his work on cellular automata and reversible computing. He is a research affiliate with the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.