Marjorie Boulden
Marjorie Boulden | |
|---|---|
| Marjorie Boulden | |
| Born | February 3, 1964 |
| Residence | Austin, TX, United States |
| Nationality | USA |
| Alma mater | University of Hawaii at Manoa |
| Known for | Electric Universe |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Electrical Engineer |
| Institutions | Motorola |
Marjorie Boulden (born February 3, 1964) is an American electrical engineer and an advocate of the Electric Universe model of cosmology.
Biography
Boulden earned a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She built her career in the semiconductor industry as a VLSI and microchip design engineer, joining Motorola out of graduate school and spending several years in its RISC processor division. She subsequently worked as a microchip design and physical-verification contractor for clients including Motorola and Legerity, specializing in the integration of process constraints into design flow and in coding LVS/DRC verification decks. She is based in Austin, Texas.
Work
Boulden is associated with the Electric Universe community and the Thunderbolts Project, which hold that electricity and plasma play a far greater role in cosmic phenomena than is recognized by mainstream astrophysics. In 2012 she took part in the EU2012 Encore Symposium as a panelist in the session "Trailblazing: The Role of Focused Experiments," which addressed opportunities for advancing science through targeted laboratory work. Fellow panelists included Wal Thornhill, Monty Childs, Paul Anderson, and Greg Volk.