Technical University of Munich
Munich University of Technology, or Technical University of Munich (TUM) (German: Technische Universität München, TUM), is a major German university, located in Munich (and the towns of Garching and Weihenstephan out of Munich).
Munich's other major university is the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.
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| Motto: At home in Bavaria, successful in the world | |
| President | Wolfgang A. Herrmann |
| School type | public |
| Founded | 1868 |
| Location | Munich, Germany |
| Enrollment | 20,000 undergrad.+grad., 750 post-grad. |
| Table of contents |
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2 Organisation 3 Students 4 Faculty 5 History 6 Nobel Laureates 7 Famous TUM Personalities 8 Partnerships 9 See also 10 External links |
The TUM does has several campuses:
The TUM is divided into 12 faculties:
Currently TUM has aprox. 20,000 students in undergraduate and graduate programs of which 3,700 are foreign students.
TUM has 500 professors, academic staff is 4,000, non-academic 5,500.
TUM was founded by King Ludwig II in 1868.
TUM features the world's first research neutron source FRM-II. It got into service on March 2, 2004.
TUM's first spin-off is the German Institute of Science and Technology, GIST, in Singapore (together with National University of Singapore).
TUM has international partnerships with Stanford University, Tokyo Institute of Technology, National University of Singapore, Illinois Institute of Technology and many more.Campuses
Organisation
Students
Faculty
History
Nobel Laureates
Famous TUM Personalities
Partnerships

