BGU

Faculty of Natural Sciences

Dean: Prof. Dolev Shlomi


The Faculty of Natural Sciences includes six departments: Chemistry, Geology and Environmental Sciences, Life Sciences, Mathematics, Computer Science, and Physics. The Faculty comprises some 145 academic staff, 2,000 undergraduate students, 500 graduate students, and over 40 scientists from the former Soviet Union. The Faculty is responsible for providing foundation courses in the basic sciences for the full-time equivalent of over 1800 students majoring in engineering, medical and social sciences at Ben-Gurion University. The Faculty`s mission is twofold: provide for the basic scientific and advanced research training of Israel`s future scientists, creating a human infrastructure of the highest standard for the industrial and applied scientific requirements of the Negev and the State of Israel; and pursue scholarly investigations, basic and applied, in the full spectrum of knowledge in the disciplines of mathematics and the natural sciences. The Faculty continuously strives for excellence in research, annually publishing approximately 800 research papers, presenting over 340 invited lectures in international forums, and raising external funding approaching $20 million. The dynamism of research efforts is augmented by short visits of over 130 scientific visitors each year, including many involved in collaborative programs. Examples of recent capital equipment acquisitions include establishment of the Laboratory for Magnetic Resonance (administered jointly by the Departments of Chemistry and Physics) at a cost of over $1 million, and the acquisition of state-of-the-art X-ray single crystal instrumentation for $500,000. The theoretical and experimental, basic and applied research programs have direct relevance to development of the Negev, Israel`s southern desert. Sophisticated, up-to-date laboratories have been painstakingly built up, and although far from complete, contain equipment which is vital to the development of this region. The spectrum of scientific endeavor in the Faculty of Natural Sciences range from computer science to biotechnology; from polymers to lasers; high-tech industrial applications in electronics, computers and electro-optics and transformation of the natural resources of the Negev into the modern industrial powerhouse of the State of Israel: phosphate and potash-based fertilizer, glass and ceramics; bromine compounds and intermediates in the processing of new drugs and natural cosmetics are some examples. The Faculty provides knowledge and expert services and serves as an incubator for high technology developments and successful absorption of new immigrant scientists. The Faculty also trains science teachers for secondary education, and qualified personnel for local industry, government and health service laboratories. The faculty thus not only functions as a training ground for expert manpower but is pushing back the frontiers of the desert while advancing those of science.

Academic Staff
Dolev Shlomi