Additionally, Markov is an American non-profit executive[2] responsible for aid to Ukraine worth over a hundred million dollars.
[6][7] From the early 2000s through 2018 he was a professor at University of Michigan,[1] where he supervised doctoral dissertations and degrees of 12 students in Electrical engineering and Computer science.
[18] Markov was the 2009 recipient of IEEE CEDA Ernest S. Kuh Early Career Award "for outstanding contributions to algorithms, methodologies and software for the physical design of integrated circuits.
[24] Markov's peer-reviewed scholarly work was recognized with five best-paper awards, including four at major conferences and a journal in the field of electronic design automation, and one in theoretical computer science: Markov co-authored over 200 peer-reviewed publications in journals and archival conference proceedings, and Google Scholar reported over 19,000 citations of his publications as of October 2023.
In a 2014 Nature article,[37] Markov surveyed known limits to computation, pointing out that many of them are fairly lose and do not restrict near-term technologies.
[38] [39] Markov co-edited the two-volume Electronic Design Automation handbook published in second edition by Taylor & Francis in 2016.