Fast Facts

On Campus

Technion City                                                 1,325,000 square meters

Built-up Area                                                  464,317 square meters

Buildings                                                         90

Student Dormitory Beds                              4,442

Faculties                                                          17

Student Statistics

2012 Student Population

Undergraduate Studies:                                         9,529

Master’s Degrees:                                                    2,384

Doctoral Degrees:                                                    943

TOTAL (2012):                                                         12,856

Degrees Awarded (from 1927-2012 inclusive)   95,821

Faculty Members                                                     616

Clinicians and Adjuncts                                        1,176

From the Lab to the Marketplace

  • Technion graduates comprise the majority of Israeli-educated scientists and engineers, constituting over 70% of the country’s founders and managers of high-tech industries
  • Due to the ingenuity of Technion alumni, Israel is now home to the greatest concentration of high-tech startup companies anywhere outside of the Silicon Valley
  • 80% of Israeli NASDAQ companies are led by Technion graduates.
  • High-tech industry now accounts for more than 54% of Israel’s industrial exports, and over 26% of the country’s exports
  • 135 out of every 10,000 workers in Israel are scientists and engineers, compared to the USA, in second place with 85 out of every 10,000 workers
  • Nine out of every 1,000 workers are engaged in R&D, nearly double the rate of the USA and Japan
  • 74% of managers in Israel’s electronic industries hold Technion degrees

Exceptional Academic Achievements

  • Professor Dan Shechtman of the Materials Engineering Faculty received the 2011 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of Quasiperiodic Crystals – a new class of materials
  • Professors Avram Hershko and Aaron Ciechanover of the Faculty of Medicine received the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their discovery of the crucial role of ubiquitin in the process of protein breakdown in cells
  • Professors Uri Sivan, Erez Braun and Yoav Eichen have used DNA strands to assemble a conductive wire 1,000 times thinner than a human hair
  • The Technion is one of a handful of universities worldwide with a student program to design, build, and launch their own satellites. The Gurwin TechSat II microsatellite was successfully in orbit July 1998 – April 2010
  • The Lempel/Ziv Algorithm, developed by Professor Abraham Lempel from Computer Science and Professor Jacob Ziv from Electrical Engineering, has become an international standard for data compression, and an IEEE Milestone
  • Professor Karl Skorecki discovered genetic proof that all Jews belonging to the Cohen lineage are descendants of the biblical high priest Aaron Hacohen
  • Professor Emeritus Dan Zaslavsky developed an alternative low-cost method for electricity production and water desalination based on cooling hot desert air in a 1,000-meter high, 500-meter diameter tower
  • Professors Moussa Youdim and John Finberg from the Faculty of Medicine, together with Teva Pharmaceuticals, have developed rasagaline,  — a new anti-Parkinson’s disease drug (Azilect®.)
  • Professor Moti Segev’s world-acclaimed research casts powerful new insights on solitons in photonic lattices that are transforming the applications of light waves in high-tech industries
  • Prof. Yonina Eldar shows how low-rate data conversion schemes in signal processing break the fundamental Nyquist-Shannon barrier. Applications include communications, digital devices, cell phones, digital storage, and medical imaging
  • Quantum computing and cryptology promise to make computing much faster and 100 percent secure. The revolution in the field was generated by Prof. Asher Peres, one of the fathers of quantum teleportation