David J. C. MacKay
Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Sir David John Cameron MacKay (22 April 1967 – 14 April 2016)[1][2] was a British physicist, mathematician, and academic. He was the Regius Professor of Engineering[3] in the Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge[4] and from 2009 to 2014 was Chief Scientific Advisor to the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC).[5] MacKay wrote the book Sustainable Energy – Without the Hot Air.[6][7][8]
Education
MacKay was educated at Newcastle High School and represented Britain in the International Physics Olympiad in Yugoslavia in 1985,[9] receiving the first prize for experimental work. He continued his education at Trinity College, Cambridge, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Natural Sciences (Experimental and theoretical physics) in 1988.[1] He went to the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) as a Fulbright Scholar, where his supervisor was John Hopfield.[10] He was awarded a PhD in 1992.[11][12][13]
Career and research
In January 1992 MacKay was appointed the Royal Society Smithson Research Fellow at Darwin College, Cambridge, continuing his cross-disciplinary research in the Cavendish Laboratory, the Department of Physics of the University of Cambridge. In 1995 he was made a University Lecturer in the Cavendish Laboratory. He was promoted in 1999 to a Readership, in 2003 to a Professorship in Natural Philosophy and in 2013 to the post of Regius Professorship of Engineering.[14]
MacKay's contributions[15][16][17][18] in machine learning and information theory include the development of Bayesian methods[19] for neural networks,[20] the rediscovery (with Radford M. Neal) of low-density parity-check codes,[21] and the invention of Dasher,[22] a software application for communication especially popular with those who cannot use a traditional keyboard.[23] He cofounded the knowledge management company Transversal.[24] In 2003, his book Information Theory, Inference, and Learning Algorithms[25] was published.
His interests beyond research included the development of effective teaching methods and African development; he taught regularly at the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cape Town from its foundation in 2003 to 2006. In 2008 he completed a book on energy consumption and energy production without fossil fuels called Sustainable Energy – Without the Hot Air. MacKay used £10,000 of his own money to publish the book, and the initial print run of 5,000 sold within days.[26] The book received praise from The Economist,[27] The Guardian,[26] and Bill Gates, who called it "one of the best books on energy that has been written."[28][29] Like his textbook on Information theory, MacKay made the book available for free online.[30] In March 2012 he gave a TED talk on renewable energy.[31]
MacKay was appointed to be Chief Scientific Advisor of the Department of Energy and Climate Change, United Kingdom, in September 2009.[5] In October 2014, at the end of his five-year term, he was succeeded by John Loughhead.[32]
Awards and honours
MacKay was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2009.[33] His certificate of election reads:Template:Centred pull quote
In the 2016 New Year Honours, MacKay was appointed a Knight Bachelor "for services to Scientific Advice in Government and Science Outreach", and therefore granted the title sir.[34][35]
Personal life
David MacKay was born the fifth child of Donald MacCrimmon MacKay and Valerie MacKay.[1] His elder brother Robert S. MacKay FRS (born in 1956) is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Warwick. David was a vegetarian.[36]
He married Ramesh Ghiassi in 2011.[1] They had a son and a daughter.[2]
Illness and death
MacKay was diagnosed with inoperable stomach cancer (malignant adenocarcinoma) in July 2015,[13] for which he underwent palliative chemotherapy, a process he documented in detail on his public personal blog.[37][38] He died in the afternoon of 14 April 2016.[39][40][41][42] He is survived by his wife and two children.[2]
References
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- 1967 births
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- British physicists
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- Fellows of Darwin College, Cambridge
- Fellows of the Royal Society
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- People from Stoke-on-Trent
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- Fellows of the Institute of Physics
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- Knights Bachelor
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- Regius Professors
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- Engineering professors at the University of Cambridge
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