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Kaku was born in 1947 in San Jose, California. [2] [3] [4] His parents were both second-generation Japanese-Americans. [5]According to Kaku, his grandfather came to the United States to participate in the cleanup operation after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and his father and mother were both born in California. [6]
Kaku is a Japanese surname and a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: Surname: Michio Kaku (加來 道雄, born 1947), American physicist; Genji Kaku (郭 源治, born 1956), Taiwanese-born Japanese baseball player; Tomohiro Kaku (郭 智博, born 1984), Japanese actor; Kento Kaku (賀来 賢人, born 1987 ...
Ray Kurzweil, Michio Kaku, Peter Diamandis and Brian Greene guide the documentary aspect, discussing possible changes the future might hold based on their research: Artificial Intelligence, Man merging with Machine, the human species becoming an interplanetary entity. Exploring life in both the near and the far future, where artificial ...
Leading theoretical physicist Michio Kaku predicts a revolution once machines can solve problems for which supercomputers might need millennia.
Michio Kaku, theoretical physicist specializing in string field theory; Akihiro Kanamori, mathematician specializing in set theory; Toichiro Kinoshita (1925–2023), theoretical physicist; Jay Kochi (1927–2008), chemist; Dorinne K. Kondo, anthropologist; John Maeda, computer scientist, artist, professor at MIT; Syukuro Manabe, 2021 Nobel ...
Michio Kaku, theoretical physicist, author, and college professor; attended Cubberly High School and built an atom smasher in his parents' garage [58] Brian Kobilka, Nobel laureate in chemistry, lives in Palo Alto; Arthur Kornberg (1918–2007), Nobel prize-winning biochemist; Pamela Melroy, astronaut and second woman to command a space shuttle ...
Physics of the Future: How Science Will Shape Human Destiny and Our Daily Lives by the Year 2100 is a 2011 book by theoretical physicist Michio Kaku, author of Hyperspace and Physics of the Impossible. In it Kaku speculates about possible future technological development over the next 100 years.
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