About


FROM BEN-GURION AIRPORT TO HAIFA

Train
There is now a train service from the airport to Haifa. The fare is about 40NIS one way. Sunday through Thursday, between 05:00 and 23:00 the trains run about every half hour, between 23:00 and 5:00 every hour. Fridays they run only in the morning, and Saturdays only in the late evening.
You can check the train schedule at the Israel Railways Web Site The most convenient station for Technion is "Hof HaCarmel", from where you can take a bus (NO. 11) or a taxi (see below) or a shuttle (No. 11). 

Taxi
There is a taxi stand outside the airport. The fare for a private taxi to the Technion is about 400NIS ($100).
Shuttle
There is a shuttle which will take you from the terminal to the taxi rank and city shuttle stations. Ask for the shuttle "Amal" to Haifa. The fare is 56
NIS and the driver will take you to your destination (hotel, Technion Guest House, Technion physics department, etc).

ENTRY INTO TECHNION BY CAR
Give your host your car number, model and color and your estimated time of arrival and ask him/her to fax the security entry form to the main(west) or east gate. (Click HERE for map of Technion). If you are attending a conference, then the program you have printed from the Physics website constitutes an entry permit.

CAR - from the South (click here for map)

Take route #2 north. Take the first exit AFTER the Atlit interchange, and before the bridge. The exit is near the MATAM research park and has a sign to the Technion. You then make a right turn at the T junction (mandatory) and then a left at the next traffic light, following the sign to the Technion.

Stay on this road (called Fleiman and then Freud) for about 4Km, until you reach a T junction with a traffic light. Turn left and immediately right at the next light into Pica Road. Follow this road for about 1.5 Km, and bear right after the gas station. After about 1 Km take the left lane where the road goes under a tunnel. Bear right just before the next traffic light into Komoi Street and then i bear to the left at the following light. After 200 meters or so you'll be at the main Technion (west) gate.

Within the Technion drive straight, following the main ring road (which bears left just after Industrial Engineering). Turn left just after the third bus stop. The (new) main entrance to the Physics Department is 100 m along this road, on the right. Park where you can. Please see the map.

CAR - from the North and West (click here for map)


Follow the signs to the Technion through Nesher. If for any reason an entry form has not been faxed to the gate for you and you must therefore park outside the campus, then this gate is closer to Physics than the main gate. Please see the map.
Once through the gate continue straight, turn left at the circle, and then first right. Continue along this road for about 100 m, and you will see the main (new) entrance to the Physics Department on the right. Park wherever you can find a space.


BUSES
Take an intercity bus to the Haifa Hof Hacarmel bus station. We recommend that you take a taxi from the bus station to Technion, as the bus can take 3/4 hour in the morning peak hours, whereas a taxi is much quicker. There is also a sherut (shared taxi) service which will bring you into the Technion and is cheaper than a private taxi.
TAXI - The taxi fare from Haifa Hof Hacarmel Bus Station to the Technion is approximately 30 N
IS.  Ask the driver to operate the meter, and ask him to take you to the main Technion gate and then use the car instructions as above to reach the Technion Physics Department.
BUS -Take bus no. 11 This bus brings you right into the Technion Campus. It runs
frequently throughout the day. You can check the bus schedule at  Egged Web site. The bus stop for Physics is the third after entering the Technion. Cross the road, turn right, walk down the hill and then turn left. The new main entrance to the Physics department is about 100 m along this road on the right

BY TRAIN

Click HERE for schedule Take a train to Haifa's Hof HaCarmel train station. Bus no. 11 from the Hof HaCarmel train station will bring you straight into Technion. There is also a shared taxi (sherut), also number 11, which goes to Technion (currently 5NIS)

tchernyiavsky1

During the first 30 years of its existence, the Technion had no separate science departments. When the institution first opened its doors in 1924, the initial study programs were in Civil Engineering and Architecture. However, a basic education in physics was considered important and was included in the curriculum of the Technion right from the outset. Interestingly enough, the stormy debate whether the courses should be taught in Hebrew or German bypassed the basic sciences, and Mathematics and Physics courses were taught only in Hebrew. The serious looking man in the photograph, Prof. Aharon Tcherniavsky, was given the sole responsibility for teaching Physics to all Technion students. Tcherniavsky (1887-1966), was a lecturer in the University of Geneva before coming to Palestine. He divided his time between the Reali school and the Technion. Both schools were located close to each other in the Hadar Carmel quarter of Haifa.

In those days, the existence of the Technion was uncertain from one day to the next, teachers often went unpaid, and luxuries like laboratory equipment were procured only through donations. Max Hecker, the first director of the Technion convinced some friends connected with the Max Kohl factory of scientific equipment in Chemnitz, Germany, to help in this matter and a student laboratory was eventually established. The photograph of this laboratory dates back to 1938. The technical staff  looked after the equipment with loving care, and some of this original items bearing the Max Kohl logo are still being used for classroom demonstrations. Apparently, they knew how to build good equipment in those days.

 labratory1938

Following the war of Independence in 1948, the Technion went through an expansion phase under the leadership of Gen.Yaakov Dori, who became the Technion President after retiring from his post as the first Chief of Staff of the IDF. As part of the expansion program, a Faculty of Science was established in 1952. A department of Physics was formed as a part of the Faculty. The first department chairman was Prof. Nathan Rosen, Einstein's last assistant. Among his other credentials, Rosen was one of the authors of the famous Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paper (see the “in Memoriam” section of this site), questioning the very basics of the Quantum Theory . Rosen was given a free hand in the recruitment of the faculty members. Some people like David Bohm came after leaving the US during the McCarthy era.

At the Technion, Bohm met a young graduate student , Yakir Aharonov. Together they were to predict what is now called the Bohm-Aharonov effect. Several young graduates of the Hebrew University joined as well. Asher Peres, who later became a Technion Research Professor, came from the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering where he was a graduate student. The first class of 6 students graduated in 1956. The head of the department for that year was Prof. Kurt Sitte, a renowned scientist in the area of cosmic rays. In 1960, Sitte, a native of Chechoslovakia, was charged with security offenses and tried. Following his conviction, Sitte left Israel. The details of this affair are not entirely clear to this day. However, it had little or no effect on the development of the department.

einstein_institute_of_physics In 1958, the Physics department moved from the “green shack” located next to the old Technion building in Hadar to the new campus in Naveh Shaanan. The Einstein Institute of Physics shown here was established, including a separate wing donated by Eric Lidow which was dedicated to experimental physics. Lidow also invited several young researchers to specialize in experimental physics of semiconductors, then an emerging field, in his company in California, “International Rectifier Corporation”. Upon their return, these researchers established a research program in semiconductors which continues to this day. The department of Physics was upgraded to a Faculty status in 1962.
rosensolidstateinstitute_ An important boost to experimental research in physics came through the establishment of the Rosen Solid State Institute in 1976. Members of the institute include researchers from the Faculties of Physics, Electrical Engineering, Chemistry and Materials Engineering. Collaborative research programs and state of the art laboratories were established in the areas of Semiconductors, Surface Science, Microelectronics etc. 30 years later, the institute continues to support high quality experimental research in those areas.
lidow1s Towards the end of the 1990’s, further development of the Faculty became a serious problem due to a shortage of lab and office space. Each new faculty member triggered a lengthy game of musical chairs. Fortunately, almost 50 years after donating the money for the first building, Eric Lidow led the effort to establish the new Lidow Complex, inaugurated in 2004. At the age of 92, Eric Lidow attented the inauguration ceremony with his family. The picture shows the family at the main entrance to The Lidow Complex, the current home of the Faculty of Physics.

The latest addition to the Faculty is the Lewiner Institute of Theoretical Physics, established in 2006. The Institute is our window to the world at large. The Institute sponsors Distinguished Lecture Series by leading scientists and supports workshops in all fields of Physics. It offers graduate students their first glimpse of the international scene, and introduces visiting scientists to research done at the Faculty. The activities of the Institute will no doubt continue to help the development of the Faculty as an internationally recognized research center.

The Faculty of Physics today maintains a vigorous research program in all the major fields of Physics, including Astrophysics, High Energy Physics, Condensed Matter Physics and Biophysics. As in the days of Tcherniavsky, the Faculty of Physics continues to be responsible for teaching physics to all Technion students.

While the 3 year BSc Physics program remains the cornerstone of the undergraduate studies in Physics, during the last decade the Faculty realized the growing importance of interdisciplinary studies. Taking advantage of being part of the top Engineering School in Israel, several joint programs with Engineering Faculties were initiated. Today, more that 50% of our undergraduates study for double degrees in Physics and Electrical Engineering, Physics and Materials Engineering, Physics and Mathematics and Physics and Computer Science. These programs are among the most lucrative in Israel, attracting some of the best students in the country. All included, about 600 students are enrolled in the undergraduate program, and 150 more are in the M.Sc. and Ph.D. programs. Our graduates can be found throughout all the ranks of academia and industry in Israel.

  Compiled by Emil Polturak ( 2007).
This compilation is based, among other sources, on the book “Technion” by Carl Alpert.


The physics department at the Technion aims to educate aspiring scientists in order to help them improve our understanding of the universe. The department also provides students with the foundations they need in order to take part in the development of technologies for the 3rd millennium. Another important goal of the department is to provide every engineering and science student at the Technion with a basic physics education. These goals are achieved with a combination of teaching and research which we conduct together with our graduate and undergraduate students. The research area of each member of Faculty is outlined in their individual homepages.