He received a B.S. in Computer Science and Mathematics from Yale University in May 1996, where he was the technician for campus humor magazine The Yale Record.[1] His undergraduate thesis was "The Geometry of Critical Ising Clusters", under the direction of Benoit Mandelbrot, the inventor of fractal geometry. He then worked at the IBM Watson Research Center in the theoretical physics department, and began graduate study at Stanford University in 1996.
He received his PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2004 under the direction of Gerald Sussman: his thesis topic was " Diversity of Evolving Systems: Scaling and Dynamics of Genealogical Trees "
His hobby of collecting place names led Rauch to found MetaCarta with John Frank and Doug Brenhouse. Using MetaCarta's software, Rauch developed maps like the four below for fun. Rauch was an inventor of spatial information processing systems.[2]
Rauch, E.M.; Millonas, M.M. (2004). "The role of trans-membrane signal transduction in Turing-type cellular pattern formation". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 226 (4): 401–407. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2003.09.018. PMID14759646.
Berz, G.; Kron, W.; Loster, T.; Rauch, E.; Schimetschek, J.; Schmieder, J.; Siebert, A.; Smolka, A.; Wirtz, A. (2001). "World map of natural hazards - a global view of the distribution and intensity of significant exposures". Natural Hazards. 23 (2–3): 443–465. doi:10.1023/A:1011193724026. S2CID128879105.
References
^The Yale Record. New Haven: Yale Record. November, 1994. p. 3.
^Chabot, Hillary (26 Sep 2001). "Say goodbye to the automobile? - MIT Student says North Point should go car-free". Cambridge Chronicle. pp. 1, 9. 'The NorthPoint areais ideal for a car-free neighborhood: good public transport already exists, and a significant fraction of area residents do without cars for most of their transport needs,' writes Eric Rauch, an MIT doctoral student and theoretical biology researcher