
The Koffler accelerator, one of the best-known buildings on campus.

Koffler accelarator at night
The 'Weizmann Institute of Science' (מכון ויצמן למדע) is a world-renowned institute of higher learning and research in
Rehovot,
Israel. It differs from other
Israeli universities in that only a
graduate program is offered, and only in the sciences.
Originally founded in 1934 by
Chaim Weizmann as the
Daniel Sieff Research Institute, it was expanded and formally rededicated as the Weizmann Institute of Science on November 2, 1949. Following further expansion and the accreditation of a graduate school (the Feinberg Graduate School), it is now best described as a research university. It presently has about 2,500 students, staff, and faculty, and offers M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in
Mathematics and
Computer Science,
Physics,
Chemistry,
Biological Chemistry and
Biology, as well as several interdisciplinary programs.
The Institute also offers programs for post-Graduate education, for all ages, as well as for the general public. These include various science clubs, camps and competitions, including several acclaimed international programs. The
Dr. Bessie F. Lawrence International Summer Science Institute attracts high school graduates from all over the world to its 4-week science-based summer camp. The Clore Garden of Science, first opened in 1999, is the world’s first completely interactive outdoor science museum
Two of its Computer Science faculty members,
Amir Pnueli and cryptographer
Adi Shamir (of
RSA fame), are
Turing Award winners (regarded as the CS equivalent of the
Nobel Prize).
Distinguished faculty
★
Haim Harari, theoretical physicist
★
Chaim Weizmann, chemist
★
Ephraim Katzir, biophysicist
★
Mordehai Milgrom, physicist
★
Adi Shamir, cryptographer
See also
★
List of universities in Israel
★
Science and technology in Israel
External links
★
Weizmann Institute of Science Website
★
The Institute's scientific activities