Technical University of Munich
Technische Universität München | |
Motto | The Entrepreneurial University |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Established | 1868 |
Founder | Ludwig II of Bavaria |
Academic affiliation | |
Budget | €1,839.2 million (2022)[1]
|
President | Thomas Hofmann (list of presidents) |
Academic staff | 666 professors 7,883 (other academic staff)[1] |
Administrative staff | 3,502 (without university hospital)[1] |
Students | 52,580 (WS 2023–24)[1] |
Address | Arcisstraße 21 , , , 80333 , 48°08′56″N 11°34′01″E / 48.149°N 11.567°E 48°08′53″N 11°34′05″E / 48.14806°N 11.56806°E |
Campus | Urban |
Colors | Blue, White |
Website | tum.de |
The Technical University of Munich (TUM or TU Munich; German: Technische Universität München) is a public research university in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. It specializes in engineering, technology, medicine, and applied and natural sciences.
Established in 1868 by King Ludwig II of Bavaria, the university now has additional campuses in Garching, Freising, Heilbronn, Straubing, and Singapore, with the Garching campus being its largest. The university is organized into seven schools, and is supported by numerous research centers. It is one of the largest universities in Germany, with 52,580 students and an annual budget of €1,839.2 million including the university hospital.[1]
A University of Excellence under the German Universities Excellence Initiative,[2] TUM is among the leading universities in the European Union.[3] Its researchers and alumni include 18 Nobel laureates and 24 Leibniz Prize winners.[1]
History
19th century
In 1868, King Ludwig II of Bavaria founded the Polytechnische Schule München with Karl Maximilian von Bauernfeind as founding director. The new school had its premises at Arcisstraße, where it is still located today. At that time, around 350 students were supervised by 24 professors and 21 lecturers. The institution was divided into six departments: The "General Department" (mathematics, natural sciences, humanities, law and economics), the "Engineering Department" (civil engineering and surveying), the "Building Construction Department" (architecture), the "Mechanical-Technical Department" (mechanical engineering), the "Chemical-Technical Department" (chemistry), and the "Agricultural Department".
In 1877, the Polytechnische Schule München became the Technische Hochschule München (TH München), and in 1901 it was granted the right to award doctorates. With an average of 2,600 to 2,800 students, the TH München became for a time Germany's largest technical university, ahead of the TH Berlin. In 1970 the institution was renamed Technische Universität München.
20th century
In 1906, Anna Boyksen became the first female student to enroll in electrical engineering, after the Bavarian government had allowed women to study at technical universities in the German Empire. Martha Schneider-Bürger became the first German female civil engineer to graduate from the university in 1927.[4]
In 1913, Jonathan Zenneck became director of the newly created Physics Institute.
During the Weimar Republic, the TH München faced the challenge of limited resources and was drawn into radical political conflicts during the November Revolution, the Great Depression, and the rise of Adolf Hitler. Two of the 16 Nazis killed in Hitler's failed coup attempt in 1923 were students at the university. The National Socialist German Students' League became the strongest faction in the General Students' Committee in 1930, and Jewish and politically unpopular professors were terrorized by the young students.[5]
After Hitler took power, the TH was soon aligned and a "Führer rector" was appointed, with the deans directly responsible to him. The Führerprinzip was also imposed on universities, resulting in a significant restriction of the autonomy of the TH München. In 1933, the newly enacted Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service led to the dismissal of staff deemed "non-Aryan" or married to "non-Aryans," as well as politically "undesirable" professors. Jewish students lost their rights and were banned from enrolling after 1938.
The university was deeply involved in the crimes of the Nazi regime. For instance, Heinz Henseler, a professor in charge of animal breeding at the university, headed a new "Colonial Science Seminar" from 1940. The seminar focused on exploring how to "Germanize" the landscapes of Poland and Russia for future colonization and settlement during the war. The entire Faculty of Agriculture was influenced by the ideology of blood and soil, and agricultural scientists had no qualms about using forced laborers and prisoners of war on university experimental farms. Henseler repeatedly asked his former student and SS chief Heinrich Himmler for additional land and led several excursions to the SS herb garden on the grounds of the Dachau concentration camp with his students.[5]
During World War II, the TH München conducted extensive research in armaments to support the war effort. Notable professors during this time included aircraft designer Willy Messerschmitt and physicist Walther Meissner. Despite the war, high-level basic research continued to be conducted in some institutes, as some professors, staff members, and students dared to disobey and resist. Nobel laureate Hans Fischer protected Jewish students from Nazi persecution. He committed suicide shortly before the end of the war.[6]
Post World War II
During the war, 80 percent of the university's facilities in Munich had been destroyed. Under these difficult conditions, teaching resumed in April 1946.
In 1956, the construction of a research reactor in Garching was the beginning of the Garching campus. In 1969, the physics department building was opened there, followed in 1977 by new buildings for the chemistry, biology and geoscience departments.
Between 1868 and 1870 the architect Arnold Zenetti oversaw the construction of several hospital buildings which are today attached to the Munich universities or form part of the TUM campus.[7] In 1967, a TUM School of Medicine was founded with campuses in the buildings of Rechts der Isar Hospital. By 1968, the so called TH München comprised six faculties, 8,400 students, and 5,700 staff. In 1972, the Zentrale Hochschulsportanlage, a 45-hectare sports center, was built on the grounds of the 1972 Summer Olympics.
In 1970, the TH München was renamed to its present name Technische Universität München. When the Bavarian Higher Education Act came into force in 1974, the six faculties were replaced by eleven departments. In 1992, the field of computer science was established as an independent Department of Informatics, having previously been part of the Department of Mathematics since 1967.
21st century
In 2002, TUM Asia was founded in Singapore, in cooperation with the Nanyang Technological University and the National University of Singapore. It was the first time that a German university had established a subsidiary abroad.
The Department of Sport and Health Sciences and the School of Management were established in 2002. The Weihenstephan departments were combined into the "Weihenstephan Centre of Life and Food Sciences" (WZW), which would later become the School of Life Sciences. With the establishment of the School of Education in 2009, the School of Governance in 2016, the Department of Aerospace and Geodesy in 2018, the [[TUM School of Natural Sciences|School of Natural Sciences] in 2023, the university comprises 7 schools and 29 research departments.
Since the inception of the German Universities Excellence Initiative in 2006, TUM has won every round of evaluation and the title University of Excellence.[2]
As part of its Agenda 2030, the 15 schools and departments were consolidated into seven schools by 2023.[8]
Campuses
TUM's academic faculties are divided amongst numerous campuses.
Munich
The historic Main Campus (Stammgelände) is located in Maxvorstadt, the central borough of Munich. Today, the departments of Architecture, Civil, Geo and Environmental Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering and the Schools of Management, Governance, Education are located here.
The TUM School of Medicine is located at the site of its university hospital, the Rechts der Isar Hospital, in the district of Haidhausen.
The TUM Department of Sport and Health Sciences is located in the Olympiapark, the former site of the 1972 Summer Olympics.
Garching
The campus in Garching, located around 10 km north of Munich, has grown to become the largest TUM campus. In the last decades, the departments of Physics, Chemistry, Mechanical Engineering, Informatics and Mathematics have all relocated from their former buildings in the Main Campus. They have since been joined by numerous research institutes, including the Max Planck Institutes for Plasma Physics, Astrophysics, Extraterrestrial Physics and Quantum Optics, the Forschungsreaktor München II (FRM II), the headquarters of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), and the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, one of the fastest supercomputers in Europe.[9]
A landmark of the Garching campus is the Oskar von Miller Tower, a meteorological measurement tower with a height of 62 m. The Garching campus is connected to Munich by the Autobahn and the Munich U-Bahn. It has its own fire department.
Weihenstephan
The third TUM campus is located 35 km north of Munich in Weihenstephan, Freising. It hosts the School of Life Sciences.
Other locations
Additional TUM facilities are located in Ottobrunn (Department of Aerospace and Geodesy),[10] Straubing,[11] Heilbronn,[12] and Singapore.
TUM Asia
TUM operates a subsidiary in Singapore. In 2001, the German Institute of Science and Technology (GIST) – TUM Asia was founded in partnership with the National University of Singapore and the Nanyang Technological University, offering a range of Master's programs. In 2010, TUM Asia started offering bachelor's degrees in collaboration with the Singapore Institute of Technology.
In 2010, TUM and the Nanyang Technological University founded TUMCREATE, a research platform for the improvement of Singapore's public transportation.[13]
Academics
Schools and departments
As a technical university, the university specializes in engineering, technology, medicine, and the applied and natural sciences. Compared to a Volluniversität (a universal university), it lacks the Geisteswissenschaften, including law and many branches of the social sciences.
As of 2023, the Technical University of Munich is organized into seven schools and 29 departments:[14]
Schools | Students | Female | International |
---|---|---|---|
|
15,092 | 22.2% | 55.1% |
|
13,285 | 29.6% | 45.1% |
|
4,950 | 35.7% | 39.3% |
|
4,884 | 57.6% | 33.6% |
|
4,393 | 54.6% | 17.0% |
|
6,977 | 39.7% | 53.2% |
|
2,201 | 57.7% | 25.0% |
TUM Campus Straubing | 798 | 45.0% | 65.3% |
Other institutions include the Rechts der Isar Hospital, the TUM Graduate School and the Munich School of Politics and Public Policy.
The TUM School of Management is triple accredited by the European Quality Improvement System (EQUIS), the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) and the Association of MBAs (AMBA).[15][16][17]
Research
The Technical University of Munich is one of the most research-focused universities in Europe. This claim is supported by relevant rankings, such as the funding ranking of the German Research Foundation and the research ranking of the Centre for Higher Education.[18]
Under the German Universities Excellence Initiative, TUM has obtained funding for multiple research clusters, including e-conversion (energy technology), MCQST (quantum mechanics), ORIGINS (astrophysics, biophysics and particle physics), and SYNERGY (neurology).[19]
In addition to the schools and departments, TUM has set up numerous research centers with external cooperation partners.[20]
Integrative research centers (IRCs) combine research with teaching.[20] They include the TUM Institute for Advanced Study (TUM-IAS), the Munich Center for Technology in Society (MCTS), the Munich Data Science Institute (MDSI), the Munich School of Engineering (MSE), the Munich School of BioEngineering (MSB), and the Munich School of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MSRM).
Corporate research centers (CRCs) carry out research independently of the schools and departments, cooperating with industry partners for application-driven research.[20] They include the research reactor FRM II, the Center for Functional Protein Assemblies (CPA), the Catalysis Research Center (CRC), the center for translational Cancer Research (TranslaTUM), the Walter Schottky Institute (WSI), the Hans Eisenmann-Zentrum for Agricultural Science, and the Institute for Food & Health (ZIEL).
Partnerships
TUM has over 160 international partnerships, ranging from joint research activities to international study programs. Partners include:[21]
- Europe: ETH Zurich, EPFL, ENSEA, École Centrale Paris, TU Eindhoven, Technical University of Denmark, Technical University of Vienna, NMBU
- United States: MIT, Stanford University, Northwestern University, University of Illinois, Cornell University, University of Texas at Austin, Georgia Tech
- Asia: National University of Singapore, Multimedia University, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Tsinghua University, University of Tokyo, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Amrita University, Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology,
- Australia: Australian National University, University of Melbourne, RMIT University.
Through the Erasmus+ program and its international student exchange program TUMexchange, students can complete exchange semesters at partner universities.[22]
Rankings and reputation
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Overall rankings
TUM is ranked 28th worldwide (first in Germany) in the QS World University Rankings 2025,[23] 26th worldwide (first in Germany) in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2025,[24] and 47th worldwide (second in Germany) in the Academic Ranking of World Universities 2024.[25] TUM ranked 11th in Europe in the 2024 QS Europe rankings.[26] In the 2023 Nature Index of academic institutions, TUM ranked 59th worldwide and first in Germany.[30]
In the 2023 edition of the Times Higher Education's Global University Employability Ranking, graduates from TUM were ranked 13th globally and first in Germany.[27] The same year, TUM held the 28th position globally (also first in Germany) in the Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings.[31] In the QS World University Sustainability Ranking 2023, TUM was ranked 109th overall and first in Germany.[32] In the Times Higher Education's Impact Rankings 2024 (industry, innovation, and infrastructure), TUM tied for first place worldwide.[33] In Reuters' 2019 European Most Innovative University ranking, TUM ranked 7th.[34]
Subject rankings
In the QS World Rankings, TUM is placed 49th overall[23] and is the highest ranked German university in engineering and technology (19th), natural sciences (23rd), and computer science (31st).[28] In the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, TUM ranks 27th in business and economics, 22nd in the physical sciences, 22nd in engineering and technology, and 15th in computer science, and is the highest ranked German university in these areas.[29] TUM is also ranked first in Germany in several subject areas by ARWU, including computer science and engineering, electrical engineering, aerospace engineering, food science, biotechnology, environmental engineering, medical technology, management, and transportation science.[35]
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Student life
As of winter semester 2023/24, 52,580 students are enrolled at TUM, of whom 36% are female and 45% are international students.[1]
Student initiatives
Various initiatives are run by students, including TEDxTUM, the TUM Speaker Series (past speakers having included Ban Ki-moon, Tony Blair, Bill Gates, Sam Altman and Eric Schmidt),[36] and IKOM, a career fair.[37]
A notable student group is the Workgroup for Rocketry and Space Flight (WARR), which won all SpaceX Hyperloop pod competitions in 2017 through 2019.[38][39][40] In 2021, TUM Boring, won the tunnel-boring competition sponsored by The Boring Company in Las Vegas, Nevada.[41] In 2023, a team from the university won second place at the Indy Autonomous Challenge, a autonomous racecar competition in Las Vegas.[42]
Student government
The Student Council is the main body for university-wide student representation. It elects the General Student Committee (AStA), which represents the professional, economic and social interests of the students, by the Bavarian Higher Education Act. Each school or department will also have a separate Departmental Student Council.[citation needed]
Every year, university elections are held to elect student representatives in the Senate, the university's highest academic authority, and in the faculty councils.[43]
Events
The Student Council organizes a number of annual festivals and events. TUNIX and GARNIX are week-long open air festivals held every summer. TUNIX is held at the Königsplatz near the Munich campus, while GARNIX is held at the Garching campus. GLÜHNIX is a christmas market held in front of the Department of Mechanical Engineering every December. MaiTUM is a Bavarian Maifest, held at the Main Campus in May each year.[37][44]
Campus life
The Zentrale Hochschulsportanlage (ZHS) is the largest university sports facility in Germany, offering hundreds of different sports programs.[37]
Music ensembles at TUM include the TUM Chamber Orchestra, the TUM Jazz Band, the TUM Choir, and the Symphonisches Ensemble München, a full-size symphony orchestra.[37]
Notable people
Nobel Prize laureates
17 Nobel Prize winners have studied, taught or researched at the TUM:
- 1927 – Heinrich Otto Wieland, Chemistry (bile acids)
- 1929 – Thomas Mann, Literature (Buddenbrooks)
- 1930 – Hans Fischer, Chemistry (constitution and synthesis of haemin and chlorophyll)
- 1961 – Rudolf L. Mößbauer, Physics (Mößbauer effect)
- 1964 – Konrad Emil Bloch, Physiology or Medicine (mechanism and regulation of the cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism)
- 1973 – Ernst Otto Fischer, Chemistry (sandwich complexes)
- 1985 – Klaus von Klitzing, Physics (quantum Hall effect)
- 1986 – Ernst Ruska, Physics (electron microscope)
- 1988 – Johann Deisenhofer and Robert Huber, Chemistry (crystal structure of an integral membrane protein)
- 1989 – Wolfgang Paul, Physics (ion trap)
- 1991 – Erwin Neher, Physiology or Medicine (function of single ion channels in cells)
- 2001 – Wolfgang Ketterle, Physics (Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms)
- 2007 – Gerhard Ertl, Chemistry (chemical processes on solid surfaces)
- 2016 – Bernard L. Feringa (TUM-IAS fellow), Chemistry (molecular machine)
- 2017 – Joachim Frank, Chemistry (cryo-electron microscopy)
- 2022 – Anton Zeilinger, Physics (Quantum information science)
Scientists
- Friedrich L. Bauer, computer scientist, known for the stack data structure
- Rudolf Bayer, computer scientist, known for the B-tree and Red–black tree
- Rudolf Diesel, engineer, inventor of the Diesel engine
- Claude Dornier, airplane designer
- Emil Erlenmeyer, chemist, known for the Erlenmeyer flask
- Asta Hampe, engineer, statistician and economist
- Carl von Linde, engineer, discoverer of the refrigeration cycle
- Heinz Maier-Leibnitz, physicist
- Walther Meissner, physicist, known for the Meissner effect
- Willy Messerschmitt, aircraft designer, known for the Messerschmitt fighters
- Oskar von Miller, engineer, founder of the Deutsches Museum
- Erich Rieger, astrophysicist, discoverer of the Rieger periodicities that permeate the Solar System
See also
Notes and references
- ^ a b c d e f g "TUM in figures". Technische Universität München. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
- ^ a b "Final decisions in the German Excellence Strategy". Wissenschaftsrat.de.
- ^ "TUM ist beste Universität in Deutschland und EU". www.tum.de. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
- ^ Stiglat, Klaus (2004). Bauingenieure und ihr Werk. Berlin: Ernst & Sohn. ISBN 3-433-01665-8. OCLC 53848171.
- ^ a b Wetzel, Jakob (20 May 2018). "TU München: Forschung im Dienst der Nazis". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
- ^ Pabst, p. 321–350
- ^ Andres Lepik; Katrin Bäumler, eds. (2018). The Architecture Under King Ludwig II: Palaces and Factories. Walter de Gruyter GmbH. pp. 30–31. ISBN 9783035616538.
- ^ "TUM Agenda 2030: Innovation durch Talente, Exzellenz und Verantwortung" (PDF). Technische Universität München.
- ^ "Das Garchinger Hochschul- und Forschungszentrum". garching.de (in German). Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "New Department of Aerospace, Aeronautics and Geodesy". Technical University of Munich. 21 September 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ ""Straubing in der ersten Liga"". Bayerischer Rundfunk (in German). 20 July 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Mega-endowment for TUM Campus Heilbronn". Technical University of Munich. 7 February 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "About TUMCREATE". TUM CREATE. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Organizational Structure". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ "EQUIS Accredited Schools". European Quality Improvement System. 20 September 2018. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- ^ "AACSB-Accredited Business Schools". Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- ^ "Accredited Schools". Association of MBAs. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
- ^ Förderatlas 2018 (PDF). Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. 2018.
- ^ "Clusters of Excellence – Exzellenzstrategie". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ a b c "Research Centers". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "International Partner Universities". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Study abroad". TUM Global & Alumni Office. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ a b c "QS World University Rankings 2025". QS World University Rankings. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
- ^ a b "World University Rankings 2024". Times Higher Education World University Rankings. 27 September 2023. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
- ^ a b "2024 Academic Ranking of World Universities". Academic Ranking of World Universities. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
- ^ a b "QS World University Rankings: Europe 2024". QS World University Rankings. Retrieved 20 September 2023.
- ^ a b "Best universities for graduate jobs: Global University Employability Ranking 2023". Times Higher Education World University Rankings. 23 November 2023. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "QS World University Rankings by Subject 2024". QS World University Rankings. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "World University Rankings by subject". Times Higher Education World University Rankings. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
- ^ "2023 tables: Institutions – academic | Annual tables | Nature Index". Nature. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
- ^ "World Reputation Rankings". Times Higher Education (THE). Retrieved 17 August 2024.
- ^ "QS Sustainability University Rankings 2023". QS World University Rankings. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- ^ "Impact Rankings 2024: industry, innovation, and infrastructure".
- ^ "Reuters Top 100: Europe's Most Innovative Universities 2019 announced". Reuters. 30 April 2019. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
- ^ a b "ShanghaiRanking's Global Ranking of Academic Subjects 2023". Academic Ranking of World Universities.
- ^ "TUM Speakers Series". Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Campus life". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ Boyle, Alan (27 August 2017). "Germany's WARR team wins SpaceX's Hyperloop II race with 201-mph pod run". GeekWire. US. Archived from the original on 25 September 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2017.
- ^ "WARR Hyperloop pod hits 284 mph to win SpaceX competition". The Verge. 18 July 2018. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
- ^ "Team TUM wins SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition with record 288 mph top speed". TechCrunch. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
- ^ Paleja, Ameya (23 September 2021). "Musk's Boring Company Announces Not-a-Boring Competition Winner". Interesting Engineering. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
- ^ Zeitung, Süddeutsche (8 January 2023). "Messe: TU München belegt erneut zweiten Platz bei Roboterauto-Rennen". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
- ^ "University elections on July 28, 2020". Technical University of Munich. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- ^ "Unsere Veranstaltungen – Studentische Vertretung". Technical University of Munich Student Council (in German). Retrieved 22 December 2020.
Bibliography
- Pabst, Martin (2006). Technische Universität München: die Geschichte eines Wissenschaftsunternehmens (in German). Berlin: Metropol. ISBN 978-3-938690-34-5. OCLC 645055557.
- Wengenroth, Ulrich (1993). Technische Universität München - Annäherungen an ihre Geschichte (in German). Technische Universität München. ISBN 978-3-929391-03-9. OCLC 243765003.
External links
- Official website (in German and English)