Tommaso Toffoli

Tommaso Toffoli

Tommaso Toffoli (1943 - )is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Boston University. He joined the faculty in 1995. He was born in Montereale Cellina, in north eastern Italy, and raised in Rome. He received his doctorate in physics from the University of Rome in 1967. In 1976 he received a Ph.D. in computer and communication science from the University of Michigan. In 1977, he joined the faculty of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He currently lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and has two children, Julia, 22, and Lucas, 20.

He has worked on cellular automata and the theory of artificial life (with Edward Fredkin and others), and is known for the invention of the Toffoli gate.

Books

* "Cellular Automata Machines: A New Environment for Modeling", MIT Press (1987), with Norman Margolus. ISBN 0262200600.

ee also

*CAM-6

References

* [http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/rd/481/toffoaut.html Author bio]

External links

* [http://pm1.bu.edu/~tt/ Homepage]
* [http://pm1.bu.edu/~tt/publ.html List of published articles]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tommaso Toffoli — Naissance 1943 Montereale Valcellina (  Italie) Domicile Cambridge Nationalité Italien Champs …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Toffoli gate — In computer science, the Toffoli gate, invented by Tommaso Toffoli, is a universal reversible logic gate, which means that any reversible circuit can be constructed from Toffoli gates. It is also known as the controlled controlled not gate, which …   Wikipedia

  • Porte de Toffoli — En informatique, la porte de Toffoli (également CCNOT porte), inventée par Tommaso Toffoli, est une porte logique universelle réversible, ce qui signifie que n importe quel circuit réversible peut être construite à partir de portes de Toffoli.… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Billiard ball computer — Fredkin and Toffoli Gate billiard ball model A billiard ball computer, also known as a conservative logic circuit, is an idealized model of a reversible mechanical computer based on newtonian dynamics, proposed in 1982 by Edward Fredkin and… …   Wikipedia

  • Norman Margolus — Norman H. Margolus (born 1955)[1] is an Canadian American[2] physicist and computer scientist, known for his work on cellular automata and reversible computing.[3] He is a research affiliate with the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence… …   Wikipedia

  • Cam-6 — The CAM 6 accelerator is a PC compatible expansion board designed to execute cellular automata. It is described at length in Cellular Automata Machines , by Tommaso Toffoli and Norman Margolus (MIT Press, 1987). ee also* Cellular automaton *… …   Wikipedia

  • Billiard-ball computer — [ Fredkin and Toffoli Gate Billiard Ball Model] A billiard ball computer as in ref|penr is an idealized model of a computing machine based on Newtonian dynamics. Instead of using electronic signals like a conventional computer, it relies on the… …   Wikipedia

  • History of artificial life — The idea of human artifacts being given life has fascinated mankind for as long as men have been recording their myths and stories. Whether Pygmalion or Frankenstein, mankind has been fascinated with the idea of artificial life. Pre computer… …   Wikipedia

  • Timeline of quantum computing — Timeline of quantum computers1970s* 1970 Stephen Wiesner invents conjugate coding.* 1973 Alexander Holevo publishes a paper showing that n qubits cannot carry more than n classical bits of information (a result known as Holevo s theorem or Holevo …   Wikipedia

  • Cellular automaton — A cellular automaton (plural: cellular automata) is a discrete model studied in computability theory, mathematics, theoretical biology and microstructure modeling. It consists of a regular grid of cells , each in one of a finite number of states …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”