Teknik Telekomunikasi    
   
Daftar Isi
(Sebelumnya) Berkman Center for Internet & ...Bernd Fix (Berikutnya)

Berlin Institute of Technology

Technische Universität Berlin
TU-Berlin-Logo.svg
Motto

Wir haben die Ideen für die Zukunft

(We have the ideas for the future)
Established1770/1799/1879
1946
TypePublic University
EndowmentState: EUR 268.6 Mio. (2011)[1]
External: EUR 158,9 Mio (2011)[1]
PresidentProf. Dr.-Ing. Joerg Steinbach (since 01.April 2010)
Admin. staff

8,070 (2012)[1]

Students29,675 (SS 2012)[1]
LocationBerlin, Germany
52°30′43″N 13°19′35″E / 52.51194°N 13.32639°E / 52.51194; 13.32639Coordinates: 52°30′43″N 13°19′35″E / 52.51194°N 13.32639°E / 52.51194; 13.32639
CampusUrban
Nobel Laureates10[2][3][4]
AffiliationsTIME, TU9, CESAER, DFG, SEFI, PEGASUS
Websitewww.tu-berlin.de/menue/home/parameter /en

The Technische Universität Berlin (TUB or TU Berlin) is a research university located in Berlin, Germany and one of the largest and most prestigious research and education institutions in Germany. The university was founded in 1879. It has the highest proportion of foreign students out of universities in Germany, with 20.9% in the summer semester of 2007, roughly 5,598 students. The university alumni and professor list include National Academies elections,[5] two National Medal of Science laureates[6][7] and ten Nobel Prize winners.[2][4][8]

The TU Berlin is a member of TU9, an incorporated society of the largest and most notable German institutes of technology and of the Top Industrial Managers for Europe[9] network, which allows for student exchanges between leading European engineering schools. It also belongs to the Conference of European Schools for Advanced Engineering Education and Research.[10] As of 2011, TU Berlin is ranked 46th (2010: 48th) in the world in the field of Engineering & Technology according to QS World University Rankings. [11] The university is known for its high ranked engineering programmes, esspecially in mechanical engineering and engineering management.[12]

Contents

History

The old northern front of the main building, which was considerably damaged during the Second World War and replaced by a modern front in the 1960s

The Technische Universität Berlin was formed through the merger of three independent founding colleges. The oldest of these is the Bergakademie Berlin, the "Prussian Mining Academy", which was created by the geologist Carl Abraham Gerhard in 1770 with the aid the Prussian king Frederick II of Brandenburg-Hohenzollern. Before becoming a part of the TU Berlin, the mining college was, however, for a long time under the auspices of the "University of Berlin" (now "Humboldt-University of Berlin"), before it was spun out again as of September, 1st 1860 and eventually merged with the "Berlin Polytechnic" in 1916. The other two founding colleges were the Bauakademie Berlin, the "College of Civil Engineering" established in 1799, and the Gewerbe Institut Berlin, the "Berlin College for Vocational Studies", founded in 1829. Both colleges were merged by the Prussian government in 1879 to form the "Royal Technical College of Charlottenburg", named after the borough of Charlottenburg just outside Berlin where the Polytechnic was situated. In 1899 the "Royal Technical College" was the first institution of Higher education in Germany that awarded the Diplom as the standard degree for graduates. After Charlottenburg's adsorption into metropolitan Berlin in 1920 and Germany being turned into a Republic, it became eventually know as the "Polytechnic Institution of Berlin". In 1927 the department of Geodesy of the "Agricultural College of Berlin" was incorporated into the "Berlin Polytechnic". The "Berlin Polytechnic" was closed after World War II on 20 April 1945 and re-opened on 9 April 1946 under the name of '"Technische Universität Berlin".

The TU Berlin Architecture Building in May 1968, with banners in protest against the adoption of the German Emergency Acts.

Campus

South side of the main building (in winter)
Main building (in summer)
Telefunken-Hochhaus, the tallest building on campus, with a bird's-eye-view cafeteria on floor 20.
Entrance of the main library of Technische Universität Berlin and of the Berlin University of the Arts

The TU Berlin covers ca. 600,000 m², distributed over various locations in Berlin. The main campus is located in the borough of Charlottenburg. The seven schools of the university have some 28,200 students enrolled in more than 50 subjects (January, 2009).[13]

El Gouna campus: Technische Universität Berlin has Established a satellite campus in Egypt to act as a scientific and academic field office. The nonprofit public-private partnership (PPP) aims to offer services provided by Technische Universität Berlin at the campus in El Gouna on the Red Sea.[14]

Organization

Since 4 April 2005, the TU Berlin has consisted of the following schools:

  1. Humanities
  2. Mathematics and Natural Sciences
  3. Process Sciences and Engineering
  4. Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
  5. Mechanical Engineering and Transport Systems (including Aerospace engineering, Automotive engineering, naval and ocean engineering, and the planning and operation of transport systems)
  6. Planning – Building – Environment (merge of former schools of "Civil Engineering and Applied Geosciences" and "Architecture – Environment – Society")
  7. Economics and Management

Faculty and staff

7,601 people work at the university: 323 professors, 2,246 postgraduate researchers, and 2,078 personnel work in administration, the workshops, the library and the central facilities. In addition there are 2,301 student assistants and 142 trainees (March 2010).[15]

International student mobility is applicable through ERASMUS programme or through Top Industrial Managers for Europe (TIME) network.

Library

The new common main library of Technische Universität Berlin and of the Berlin University of the Arts was opened in 2004[16] and holds about 2.9 million volumes (2007).[17] The library building was sponsored partially (estimated 10% of the building costs) by Volkswagen and is named officially "University Library of the TU Berlin and UdK (in the Volkswagen building)".[18] Confusingly, the letters above the main entrance only state "Volkswagen Library" – without any mentioning of the universities. All former 17 libraries of Technische Universität Berlin and of the nearby University of the Arts were merged into the new library, but several departments still retain libraries of their own. In particular, the school of 'Economics and Management' maintains a library with 340,000 volumes in the university's main building (Wirtschaftswissentschaftliche Dokumentation – WiWiDok).

Notable alumni and professors

(Including those of the Academies mentioned under History)

  • August Borsig (1804–1854), businessman
  • Carl Bosch (1874–1940), chemist, Nobel prize winner 1931
  • Wernher von Braun (1912–1977), head of Nazi Germany's V-2 rocket program, saved from prosecution at the Nuremberg Trials by Operation Paperclip, first director of the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) Marshall Space Flight Center, called the father of the U.S. space program
  • Henri Marie Coandă (1886–1972), aircraft designer; discovered the Coandă Effect.
  • Krafft Arnold Ehricke (1917–1984), rocket-propulsion engineer, worked for the NASA, chief designer of the D-1 Centaur, the world's first upper-stage-booster that used liquid hydrogen and oxygen.
  • Gerhard Ertl (* 10. Oktober 1936 in Stuttgart) Physicist and Surface Chemist, Hon. Prof. and Nobel prize winner 2007
  • Ernst Stuhlinger (1913–2008), member of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, director of the space science lab at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.
  • Heinz-Hermann Koelle(*1925) former director of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, member of the launch crew on Explorer I and later directed the NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center's involvement in Project Apollo.
  • Klaus Riedel (1907–1944), German rocket pioneer, worked on the V-2 missile programme at Peenemünde.
  • Arthur Rudolph (1906–1996) worked for the U.S. Army and NASA, developer of Pershing missile and the Saturn V Moon rocket.
  • Walter Dornberger (1895–1980), developer of the Air Force-NASA X-20 Dyna-Soar project.
  • Ottmar Edenhofer (born 1961), economist
  • Wigbert Fehse (born 1937) German engineer and researcher in the area of automatic space navigation, guidance, control and docking/berthing.
  • Fritz Gosslau (1898–1965), German engineer, known for his work at the V-1 flying bomb.
  • Fritz Houtermans (1903–1966) atomic and nuclear physicist
  • Hugo Junkers (1859–1935), former of Junkers & Co, a major German aircraft manufacturer.
  • Walter Kaufmann (1871–1947), physicist, well known for his first experimental proof of the velocity dependence of mass.
  • Philipp Mißfelder (*1979), German politician
  • Ida Noddack (1896–1978), nominated three times for Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
  • Georg Hans Madelung (1889–1972), a German academic and aeronautical engineer.
  • Franz Breisig (1868–1934), mathematician, inventor of the calibration wire and father of the term quadripole network in electrical engineering
  • Wilhelm Cauer (1900–1945), mathematician, essential contributions to the design of filters
  • Carl Dahlhaus (1928–1989), musicologist
  • Dennis Gabor (1900–1971), physicist (holography), Nobel prize winner 1971
  • Fritz Haber (1868–1934), chemist, Nobel prize winner 1918
  • Sabine Hark (born 7 August 1962), sociologist and professor of gender studies
  • Gustav Ludwig Hertz (1887–1975), physicist, Nobel prize winner 1925
  • George de Hevesy (1885–1966), chemist, Nobel prize winner 1943
  • Franz Kruckenberg (1882–1965), designer of the first aerodynamic high-speed train 1931
  • Karl Küpfmüller (1897–1977), electrical engineer, essential contributions to system theory
  • Wassili Luckhardt (1889–1972), architect
  • Herbert Franz Mataré (1912-2011), German physicist and Transistor-pionier
  • Alexander Meissner (1883–1958), electrical engineer
  • Ivan Stranski (1897–1979), chemist, considered the father of crystal growth research
  • Adolf Slaby (1849–1913), German wireless pioneer
  • Alois Riedler (1850–1936), vigorous proponent of practically-oriented engineering education
  • Erwin Wilhelm Müller (1911–1977), physicist (field emission microscope, field ion microscope, atom probe)
  • Jakob Karol Parnas (1884–1949), biochemist, Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway
  • Wolfgang Paul (1913–1993), physicist, Nobel prize winner 1989
  • Ernst Ruska (1906–1988), physicist (electron microscope), Nobel prize winner 1986
  • Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1781–1841), architect (at the predecessor Berlin Building Academy)
  • Georg Schlesinger (1874–1949)
  • Franz Reuleaux (1829–1905), mechanical engineer, often called the father of kinematics
  • Albert Speer (1905–1981), architect, politician, Minister for Armaments during the Third Reich, was sentenced to 20 years prison in the Nuremberg trials
  • Kurt Tank (1893–1983), head of design department of Focke-Wulf, designed the FW-190
  • Wilhelm Heinrich Westphal (1882–1978), physicist
  • Günter M. Ziegler (*1963), Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize (2001)
  • Hermann W. Vogel, (1834–1898) photo-chemist
  • Eugene Wigner (1902–1995), physicist, discovered the Wigner-Ville-distribution, Nobel prize winner 1963
  • Konrad Zuse (1910–1995), computer pioneer
  • Abdul Qadeer Khan Pakistani nuclear scientist
  • Stancho Belkovski (1891–1962), Bulgarian architect, head of Higher Technical School in Sofia and the department of public buildings.
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951), philosopher
  • Anatol Kagan (1913-2009), Russian-born Australian architect

Rankings

As of 2011, TU Berlin is ranked 46th (2010: 48th) in the world in the field of Engineering & Technology according to QS World University Rankings.[11] In the Academic Ranking of World Universities 2011, TU Berlin ranks 201-300 overall, as one of the top 100 universities worldwide in Chemistry and as one of the top 75 in Mathematics.

See also

Other Universities of Berlin:

  • Berlin School of Economics and Law
  • Freie Universität Berlin (Free University of Berlin)
  • Hertie School of Governance
  • Humboldt Universität zu Berlin (Humboldt University of Berlin)
  • Universität der Künste (Berlin University of the Arts)

References

  1. ^ a b c d [www.tu-berlin.de/menue/ueber_die_tu_ berlin/zahlen_fakten/#91200 TU Berlin]
  2. ^ a b Gustav Hertz – Biography
  3. ^ George de Hevesy – Biography
  4. ^ a b Fritz Haber – Biography
  5. ^ National Academy of Sciences: National Academy of Sciences Home
  6. ^ Eugene Wigner – Biography
  7. ^ Wernher von Braun
  8. ^ Carl Bosch – Biography
  9. ^ T.I.M.E. – Top Industrial Managers for Europe
  10. ^ Germany
  11. ^ a b QS World University Rankings 2011 – Engineering & Technology | Top Universities
  12. ^ CHE-Ranking | Wirtschaftsingenieurwesen
  13. ^ TU Berlin: Facts & Figures
  14. ^ Campus El Gouna
  15. ^ TU Berlin: Facts & Figures
  16. ^ Universitätsbibliothek TU Berlin: About Us
  17. ^ Universitätsbibliothek TU Berlin: About Us
  18. ^ Universitätsbibliothek TU Berlin: UB Home

External links

(Sebelumnya) Berkman Center for Internet & ...Bernd Fix (Berikutnya)