Generated by GPT-5-mini| Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences | |
|---|---|
| Name | Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences |
| Established | 19XX |
| Type | Faculty |
| Parent institution | Tel Aviv University |
| Location | Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv |
| Dean | Name Placeholder |
| Website | Official website |
Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences is a major faculty within Tel Aviv University focused on the study and research of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and related fields. The faculty maintains close ties with institutions such as Weizmann Institute of Science, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Bar-Ilan University, and international partners including Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, and University of Oxford. It contributes to national and global projects involving organizations like Israel Space Agency, European Research Council, National Science Foundation, and Max Planck Society.
The faculty traces origins to early science teaching at Tel Aviv University alongside figures affiliated with Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Haifa University, and scientific developments in Israel. Early milestones intersected with events such as the expansion of Weizmann Institute of Science collaborations, the establishment of programs modeled after Princeton University, and exchanges inspired by breakthroughs at California Institute of Technology and Imperial College London. Funding and naming were influenced by philanthropy from the Sackler family and institutional partnerships with foundations connected to Rockefeller Foundation and Guggenheim Foundation.
Departments include core units paralleling departments at Harvard University, Yale University, and Columbia University: Department of Physics, Department of Chemistry, Department of Mathematics, and interdisciplinary programs similar to those at ETH Zurich and University of Chicago. Graduate and undergraduate curricula align with standards used by Princeton University and University of California, Berkeley and incorporate elements from curricula at École Normale Supérieure and Sorbonne University. Professional training links to laboratories comparable to those at Argonne National Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Research hubs mirror centers at Max Planck Society, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and Salk Institute for Biological Studies with centers in nanotechnology, quantum science, and materials science. Named centers collaborate with entities like European Molecular Biology Laboratory, CERN, European Space Agency, and thematic networks similar to Human Frontier Science Program and COST Association. Specialized institutes host projects parallel to initiatives at Los Alamos National Laboratory and Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.
Faculty members have profiles comparable to scholars affiliated with Nobel Prize laureates at Harvard Medical School and recipients of awards such as the Wolf Prize, Israel Prize, Fields Medal, and European Research Council Advanced Grant. Alumni include researchers who took positions at Princeton University, Stanford University, Caltech, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Weizmann Institute of Science, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Rutgers University, Columbia University, and Duke University. Collaborative networks link faculty to peers at Johns Hopkins University, UCLA, MIT, Imperial College London, and ETH Zurich.
The faculty occupies buildings on the Ramat Aviv campus near facilities comparable to those at Weizmann Institute of Science and research parks like Silicon Wadi. Laboratories are equipped with instruments analogous to those at European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, ALMA Observatory, and Advanced Photon Source. Computing clusters and facilities are modeled on infrastructures used by CERN, NASA, and Google DeepMind collaborations. Library and archival resources link to collections similar to National Library of Israel and joint holdings with Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Admissions practices reflect competitive selection similar to processes at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology and Hebrew University of Jerusalem, with graduate recruitment benchmarks comparable to Princeton University and Caltech. Student organizations and societies mirror groups found at Mathematical Association of America, American Physical Society, and Royal Society of Chemistry, and students participate in exchanges with University of Toronto, McGill University, Australian National University, National University of Singapore, and Tsinghua University. Career services connect graduates to employers such as Intel Corporation, IBM, Google, Microsoft, and research institutes like Bell Labs.
Strategic partnerships span national agencies including Israel Innovation Authority and international consortia like Horizon 2020, ERC, and bilateral programs with National Institutes of Health and DARPA. Academic collaborations involve institutions such as Weizmann Institute of Science, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Imperial College London, Stanford University, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Industry partnerships mirror relationships with Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Intel, Microsoft Research, Google DeepMind, and startup ecosystems in Tel Aviv and Silicon Wadi.