Technical University of Denmark
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Technical University of Denmark | |
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Danmarks Tekniske Universitet | |
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Established: | 1829 |
Type: | Public university |
Rector: | Graduate Engineer Lars Pallesen |
Staff: | 4,000 (2,000 researchers)[1] |
Students: | 7,000 (2007 est.)[2] |
Location: | Lyngby, Copenhagen, Denmark |
Affiliations: | EUA, CDIO |
Website: | http://www.dtu.dk/ |
The Technical University of Denmark (Danish: Danmarks Tekniske Universitet, DTU) was founded in 1829 as the 'College of Advanced Technology' (Danish: Den Polytekniske Læreanstalt). The initiative was taken by the renowned physicist Hans Christian Ørsted (then a professor at the University of Copenhagen) who also served as its principal until his death in 1851.
From 1933 the institution was officially known as Danmarks Tekniske Højskole (DTH), which usually was translated as the 'Technical University of Denmark'. Finally on 1 April 1994, in connection with the joining of Danmarks Ingeniørakademi (DIA) and DTH, the Danish name was changed to Danmarks Tekniske Universitet, in order to include the word 'University', thus giving rise to the acronym DTU by which the university is commonly known today.
On January 1, 2007 the university was merged with the following Danish research centers: Forskningscenter Risø, Danmarks Fødevareforskning, Danmarks Fiskeriundersøgelser (from January 1, 2008: National Institute for Aquatic Resources; DTU Aqua), Danmarks Rumcenter, and Danmarks Transport-Forskning. In November 2007 the Times Higher Education Supplement put the university as number 130 in their ranking of the universities of the world.[3]
The student union at DTU is Polyteknisk Forening (www.pf.dk), a 161-year old organisation that represents most of the DTU students.
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[edit] Campus
The university is located on a plain known as Lundtoftesletten in the northeastern end of the city of Lyngby. The area was previously home to the airfield Lundtofte Flyveplads.
The campus is roughly divided in half by the road Anker Engelunds Vej going in the east-west direction, and, perpendicular to that, by two lengthy, collinear parking lots located on either side of it. The campus is thus divided into four parts, referred to as quadrants, numbered 1 through 4 in correspondence with the conventional numbering of quadrants in the Cartesian coordinate system with north upwards.
[edit] Departments
- DTU Biosys - Department of Systems Biology
- BYG•DTU
- Center for Biological Sequence Analysis — chair Søren Brunak
- Center for Electron Nanoscopy (CEN)
- Center for Information and Communication Technologies (CICT)
- Center for Traffic and Transport (CTT)
- DTU Fotonik, Department of Photonics Engineering
- DANCHIP
- Department of Chemical Engineering (KT)
- Department of Chemistry (KEMI)
- Department of Manufacturing Engineering and Management (IPL)
- Department of Mathematics (MAT)
- Department of Mechanical Engineering (MEK)
- Department of Physics (FYSIK)
- National Institute for Aquatic Resources (DTU Aqua)
- Environment & Resources DTU (ER)
- Department of Informatics and Mathematical Modelling (DTU Informatics)
- Micro and Nanotechnology (MIC)
- The Technical Knowledge Center of Denmark (DTV)
- Department of Electrical Engineering (DTU Elektro)
[edit] Notable alumni and professors
- Craig Barrett
- Dines Bjørner
- Per Brinch Hansen
- Rodney Cotterill
- Ludwig A. Colding
- Henrik Dam
- Anker Engelund
- P. Ole Fanger
- Anders Hejlsberg
- Henrik Wann Jensen
- Lars Knudsen
- Peter Naur
- Jakob Nielsen
- P. O. Pedersen
- Ebbe Sand, football player[4]
- Bjarne Tromborg, professor specializing in photonics
- Jens Ulstrup
- Hans Christian Ørsted (founder and first rector)
DTU Alumni Association: www.alumne.dtu.dk
[edit] References
- ^ http://portalen.dtu.dk/Om_DTU/nyheder_AK.aspx?msg=bc63f250-1683-4fb1-b378-a871d5003a4b visited 2007-01-07
- ^ http://portalen.dtu.dk/Om_DTU/nyheder_AK.aspx?msg=bc63f250-1683-4fb1-b378-a871d5003a4b visited 2007-01-07
- ^ Sara Rosendal. "DTU tager tigerspring på listen over verdens bedste universiteter", ing.dk. Retrieved on 2007-11-15. (Danish)
- ^ Brøndby IF, "Bag duggede ruder", Fodbold i Brøndby, nr. 3, 2004.