Background
Golomb, Solomon Wolf was born on May 31, 1932 in Baltimore. Son of Elhanan Hirsh and Minna (Nadel) Golomb.
(Wireless communications, advanced radar and sonar systems...)
Wireless communications, advanced radar and sonar systems, and security systems for Internet transactions are contemporary examples of systems that employ digital signals to transmit information. This volume affords comprehensive, up-to-date treatment of the methodologies and application areas throughout the range of digital communication where individual signals, and sets of signals, with favorable correlation properties play a central role. Some application areas covered include Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) signals such as those in use for cell-phone communication; digital systems for coded radar and sonar signals; and methods for secure authentication and stream cipher cryptology. The authors provide the necessary mathematical background to explain how the signals are generated and to show how the signals satisfy the appropriate correlation constraints.
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(Shift register sequences are used in a broad range of app...)
Shift register sequences are used in a broad range of applications, particularly in random number generation, multiple access and polling techniques, secure and privacy communication systems, error detecting and correcting codes, and synchronization pattern generation, as well as in modern cryptographic systems. The first edition of Shift Register Sequences, published in 1967, has been for many years the definitive work on this subject. In the revised edition, Dr. Golomb has added valuable supplemental material. The revised Edition contains a comprehensive bibliography of some 400 entries which cover the literature concerning the theory and applications of shift register sequences. Written in a clear and lucid style, Dr. Golomb's approach is completely mathematical with rigorous proofs of all assertions. The proofs, however, may be omitted without loss of continuity by the reader who is interested only in results. Dr. Golomb is considered one of the foremost experts in the world with respect to combinatorial and geometrical aspects of coded communications.
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educator mathematician university official electrical engineer
Golomb, Solomon Wolf was born on May 31, 1932 in Baltimore. Son of Elhanan Hirsh and Minna (Nadel) Golomb.
AB, Johns Hopkins University, 1951. Master of Arts, Harvard University, 1953. Doctor of Philosophy, Harvard University, 1957.
Postgraduate, University Oslo, 1955—1956. Doctor of Science (honorary), Dubna International University, Russia, 1995. Doctor of Humane Letters (honorary), Hebrew Union College, Los Angeles, 1996.
Member of faculty, Boston University, 1954-1955; member of faculty, Harvard University, 1954-1955; member of faculty, University of California at Los Angeles, 1957-1961; member of faculty, California Institute Technology, 1960-1962; senior research engineer, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, 1956-1958; research group supervisor, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, 1958-1960; assistant chief telecommunications research section, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, 1960-1963; associate professor, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, 1963-1964; professor electrical engineering and mathematics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, since 1964; vice provost for research, University of Southern California, 1986-1989; university professor, since 1993; director technical Annenberg Center for Communications, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, 1995-1998. Consultant to government and industry.
(Shift register sequences are used in a broad range of app...)
(Wireless communications, advanced radar and sonar systems...)
(Shift register sequences cover a broad range of applicati...)
Fellow Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (Shannon award Information Theory Society 1995, Hamming medal 2000), American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Academy Arts and Sciences. Member National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, International Science Radio Union, Russian Academy Natural Sciences (foreign, Kapistsa medal 1995), American Mathematics Society, Mathematics Association American, Society Industrial and Applied Mathematics, Golden Key, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Pi Delta Epsilon, Eta Kappa Nu, Phi Kappa Phi.