Michael Aaron Nielsen | |
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Michael Nielsen talking at Science Online London 2011
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Born | January 4, 1974 |
Residence | Canada |
Nationality | Australian |
Fields | Physics, Computer science |
Institutions |
Los Alamos National Laboratory Caltech University of Queensland Perimeter Institute Recurse Center |
Alma mater | University of New Mexico |
Doctoral advisor | Carlton M. Caves |
Notable awards | Richard C. Tolman Prize Fellow at Caltech, Fulbright Scholar |
Website http://michaelnielsen.org |
Michael Aaron Nielsen (born January 4, 1974) is a quantum physicist, science writer, and computer programming researcher living in San Francisco.
In 2004 he was characterized as Australia's "youngest academic" and secured a Federation Fellowship at the University of Queensland; the fellowship was for five years. He worked at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, as the Richard Chace Tolman Prize Fellow at Caltech, and a Senior Faculty Member at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Nielsen obtained his PhD in physics in 1998 at the University of New Mexico. With Isaac Chuang he is the co-author of a popular textbook on quantum computing.
In 2007, Nielsen announced a marked shift in his field of research: from quantum information and computation to “the development of new tools for scientific collaboration and publication”. This work includes "massively collaborative mathematics" projects like the Polymath project with Timothy Gowers. Besides writing books and essays, he also gives talks about Open Science.
He is a member of the Working Group on Open Data in Science at the Open Knowledge Foundation.
As of 2015, Nielsen works as a Research Fellow at the Recurse Center.
Nielsen, Michael A; Chuang, Isaac L., 1968- (2010), Quantum computation and quantum information (New ed., 10th anniversary ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN