• IEEE.org
  • IEEE CS Standards
  • Career Center
  • About Us
  • Subscribe to Newsletter

0

IEEE
CS Logo
  • MEMBERSHIP
  • CONFERENCES
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • EDUCATION & CAREER
  • VOLUNTEER
  • ABOUT
  • Join Us
CS Logo

0

IEEE Computer Society Logo
Sign up for our newsletter
IEEE COMPUTER SOCIETY
About UsBoard of GovernorsNewslettersPress RoomIEEE Support CenterContact Us
COMPUTING RESOURCES
Career CenterCourses & CertificationsWebinarsPodcastsTech NewsMembership
BUSINESS SOLUTIONS
Corporate PartnershipsConference Sponsorships & ExhibitsAdvertisingRecruitingDigital Library Institutional Subscriptions
DIGITAL LIBRARY
MagazinesJournalsConference ProceedingsVideo LibraryLibrarian Resources
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
GovernanceConference OrganizersAuthorsChaptersCommunities
POLICIES
PrivacyAccessibility StatementIEEE Nondiscrimination PolicyIEEE Ethics ReportingXML Sitemap

Copyright 2025 IEEE - All rights reserved. A public charity, IEEE is the world’s largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity.

  • Home
  • /Profiles
  • Home
  • /Profiles

Nicholas C. Metropolis

Award Recipient

Featured ImageFeatured ImageNicholas Constantine Metropolis was born in Chicago on 11 June 1915. A graduate of the University of Chicago, he joined the Manhattan Project in 1943. For most of his life he remained at Los Alamos, although he also spent time as a professor of physics at the University of Chicago. Metropolis is best remembered as one of the founding fathers, along with Stan Ulam and John von Neumann, of the Monte Carlo method, which was used to design the first atomic bomb. Today, Monte Carlo is used for diverse applications, such as simulating traffic flow on highways, forecasting financial fluctuations in the stock market, and modeling radiation transport in the earth's atmosphere. Shortly after the end of World War II, von Neumann had become fascinated with ENIAC, the first electronic, digital, general-purpose, scientific computer. He told Metropolis about this machine and asked if he and his colleagues could come up with a problem for it to solve. Working with Stan Frenkel, Metropolis had ENIAC solve a problem regarding the thermonuclear bomb. In 1948, Carson Mark, then head of the Theoretical Division at Los Alamos, suggested that Metropolis return to the Laboratory and establish a facility there. Metropolis accepted the offer, and returned to lead the team that would design MANIAC, one of the first electronic digital computers. In 1956, MANIAC II (a more powerful, user-friendly version of MANIAC) was developed. In 1957, Metropolis went to the University of Chicago, where he founded and directed the university's Institute for Computer Research and worked on MANIAC III. He returned to Los Alamos in 1965, where he spent the remainder of his career. Metropolis became a senior fellow in 1980 and in 1987 became the first Los Alamos employee honored with the title "emeritus" by the University of California. He was awarded the Pioneer Medal by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and in 1995 he was honored with a daylong colloquium, "The Future of Science," held at the laboratory.
LATEST NEWS
How to Evaluate LLMs and GenAI Workflows Holistically
How to Evaluate LLMs and GenAI Workflows Holistically
The Kill Switch of Vengeance: The Double-Edged Sword of Software Engineering Talent
The Kill Switch of Vengeance: The Double-Edged Sword of Software Engineering Talent
Exploring the Elegance and Applications of Complexity and Learning in Computer Science
Exploring the Elegance and Applications of Complexity and Learning in Computer Science
IEEE CS and ACM Honor Saman Amarasinghe with 2025 Ken Kennedy Award
IEEE CS and ACM Honor Saman Amarasinghe with 2025 Ken Kennedy Award
IEEE Std 3221.01-2025: IEEE Standard for Blockchain Interoperability—Cross Chain Transaction Consistency Protocol
IEEE Std 3221.01-2025: IEEE Standard for Blockchain Interoperability—Cross Chain Transaction Consistency Protocol
Read Next

How to Evaluate LLMs and GenAI Workflows Holistically

The Kill Switch of Vengeance: The Double-Edged Sword of Software Engineering Talent

Exploring the Elegance and Applications of Complexity and Learning in Computer Science

IEEE CS and ACM Honor Saman Amarasinghe with 2025 Ken Kennedy Award

IEEE Std 3221.01-2025: IEEE Standard for Blockchain Interoperability—Cross Chain Transaction Consistency Protocol

Celebrate IEEE Day 2025 with the IEEE Computer Society

Building Community Through Technology: Sardar Patel Institute of Technology (SPIT) Student Chapter Report

IEEE CS and ACM Announce Recipients of 2025 George Michael Memorial HPC Fellowship

FacebookTwitterLinkedInInstagramYoutube
Get the latest news and technology trends for computing professionals with ComputingEdge
Sign up for our newsletter