Uri Sivan

Uri Sivan (אורי סיון)(born 1955), an Israeli physicist, is the 17th President of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. He is also the holder of the Bertoldo Badler Chair in the Technion's Faculty of Physics.

Uri Sivan
אורי סיון
Uri Sivan, 2019
Born1955 (age 6465)
NationalityIsraeli
Alma materTel Aviv University
Occupationphysicist
Known for
Home townHaifa, Israel

Biography

His family emigrated to Israel, then Mandatory Palestine, from Poland in 1936.[1] Sivan's parents studied at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology after they had been banned because they were Jewish from studying at universities in Europe.[1]

Sivan served as a pilot in the Israeli Air Force.[2]

Sivan is a physicist.[2] He has a BSc in Physics and Mathematics, and an MSc and PhD in Physics, from Tel Aviv University.[3]

In 1991, after three years at IBM’s T. J. Watson Research Center in New York State, Sivan joined the Faculty of Physics at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, and became the holder of the Bertoldo Badler Chair.[1][2]

Sivan set up and led the Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Research Institute at Technion from 2005 to 2010, and in 2017 he set up the National Advisory Committee for Quantum Science and Technology of the Council for Higher Education's Planning and Budgeting Committee.[2]

In September 2019, Sivan became the 17th President of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, replacing Peretz Lavie.[1][2]

Accolades

Sivan was awarded the Israel Academy of Sciences Bergmann Prize, the Mifal Hapais Landau Prize for the Sciences and Research, the Rothschild Foundation Bruno Prize, the Technion's Hershel Rich Innovation Award, and the Taub Award for Excellence in Research.[3]

Personal

Sivan lives in Haifa, Israel.[1] He is married and has three children.[1]

gollark: My code is so fast that it's `O(-1)`.
gollark: Should I make the random code thinger random instead?
gollark: My code is `O(lots)`.
gollark: Even gets around the evil Global Interpreter Lock for maximum performance.
gollark: Enterprise-level, fully deterministic execution of random code. Totally secure!

References

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