JTA reports a son and grandson of Vilna rabbis has been named the winner of a prestigious science award for his work in mathematics.
Solomon Wolf Golomb, a University of Southern California professor, will receive the Benjamin Franklin Medal given out by the Franklin Institute for his work on the leading edges of science and engineering. Golomb is to receive the Franklin Institute’s 2016 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Electrical Engineering for his work in space communications and the design of digital spread spectrum signals–transmissions which provide security, noise suppression and precise locations for applications such as cryptography, missile guidance, defense, space and cellular communications, radar, sonar and GPS. The award will be presented at the Philadelphia-based institute at a ceremony in April of 2016.
The Franklin Medal was the most prestigious of the awards presented by the Franklin Institute since 1824. With other awards, it was merged into the Benjamin Franklin Medal in 1998. With this award, Golomb will join the ranks of previous Franklin Medal recipients and distinguished laureates, which include Albert Einstein, Marie Curie, Stephen Hawking, Elizabeth Blackburn and Andrew Viterbi PhD ’62, the alumnus for whom the USC engineering school is named.



















