National University of Engineering

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National University of Engineering
Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería
Seal of the National University of Engineering
Motto Scientia et labor
Established 1876
Type Public University
Rector Ing. Roberto Morales Morales
Faculty 900
Undergraduates 10,500
Postgraduates 1,000
Location Lima, Peru
Website www.uni.edu.pe

National University of Engineering (Spanish:Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería) (UNI) is a prestigious engineering and science university in Lima, Peru. It was founded in 1876 by the Polish engineer Edward Jan Habich. It was first known as the Escuela Especial de Ingenieros de Construcciones Civiles y de Minas del Perú, but has traditionally been known as "Escuela de Ingenieros" ("School of Engineers").

The University was founded during a time in which the country was becoming industrialized and lacked Peruvian-educated engineers to achieve major works such as a mining exploitation, development and construction of railroads, new roads, etc.

Current admission to the University is highly competitive, with 39 applicants per vacancy in the most demanding fields such as mechatronic engineering, architecture, systems engineers, etc.

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[edit] Organization

UNI is organized into eleven schools which contain twenty-six academic departments. It's a university polarized around science, engineering, and the arts. Most of the academic departments offer different especialities of engineering including economics engineering.

School Department
School of Architecture, Urbanism and Arts Architecture
School of Science Physics
Mathematics
Chemistry
Physics Engineering
School of Environmental Engineering Sanitary Engineering
Hygiene and Industrial Security Engineering
School of Civil Engineering Civil Engineering
School of Economics Engineering and Social Sciences Economics Engineering
Statistics Engineering
School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Electrical Engineering
Electronics Engineering
Telecommunications Engineering
School of Geological, Mining and Metallurgical Engineering Geological Engineering
Metallurgical Engineering
Mining Engineering
School of Industrial and Systems Engineering Industrial Engineering
Systems Engineering
School of Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Mechanic-Electrical Engineering
Naval Engineering
Mechatronics Engineering
School of Petroleum Engineering and Natural Gas Petroleum Engineering
Petro-chemical Engineering
School of Chemical and Manufacturing Engineering Chemical Engineering
Textile Engineering

[edit] Outstanding former alumni

Among former renowned professors and students are:

  • Francisco Sagasti, former Planning manager at the World Bank.Former President of the Consultive Council of Science and Technoloy for Development in the United Nations.
  • Ronald Woodman Pollit, physicist, executive president of Instituto Geofísico del Perú. Woodman is a winner of the Appleton prize for "major contributions and leadership in the radar studies of the ionospheric and neutral atmosphere". Besides his many contributions to equatorial incoherent scatter science, he created the entire field of mesosphere, stratosphere and troposphere wind profile measurements with VHF radars. His distinguished career has spanned leadership assignments in a number of universities and scientific institutions around the world. He has been a mentor to a number of distinguished Peruvian scientists and a leader in promoting investment in science and technology in Peru. [1]
  • Jorge Heraud Pérez, inventor of Peru's first automated robot.
  • Barton Zwiebach Cantor, string theorist, author of "A First Course in String Theory" and Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He also was awarded with the MIT School of Science 2003 Teaching Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Education [2]
  • Mario R. Barbacci is a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), he was the founding chairman of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group 10.2 (Computer Descriptions and Tools) and has served as Vice-President for Technical Activities of the IEEE Computer Society, founding chairman of the Joint IEEE Computer Society/ACM Steering Committee for the Establishment of Software Engineering as a Profession. He was 1996 President of the IEEE Computer Society, 1998-1999 IEEE Division V Director, and IEEE Technical Activities Board Strategic Planning and Research Committee 2000-2002. Barbacci is the recipient of several IEEE Computer Society Outstanding Contribution Certificates, the ACM Recognition of Service Award, and the IFIP Silver Core Award. Barbacci received bachelor's and engineer's degrees in electrical engineering from the Universidad Nacional de Ingenieria, and a doctorate in computer science from Carnegie-Mellon University. [3]
  • Enrique Ciriani, architect, he receives the Grand Prix National d'Architecture of France in 1983 and also the Arnold Brunner Memorial Prize of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1997.
  • César Gonzales, an IBM Fellow at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center and also a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He is an expert in digital image and video technologies having contributed to the development of the widely used MPEG-2 video compression standard. He also led the development of advanced semiconductor chips based on this standard which IBM sold in the digital TV broadcast and consumer electronics markets. [5]
  • César Camacho Manco, mathematician, Director of Instituto Nacional de Matematica Pura e Aplicada (National Institute of Pure and Applied Mathematics), the most important mathematical institution in Brazil. He solved the "separatrix theorem" a complex dynamical problem with 150 years without solution. [6]

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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